Comparing Loihi with a SpiNNaker 2 prototype on low-latency keyword spotting and adaptive robotic control

Abstract We implemented two neural network based benchmark tasks on a prototype chip of the second-generation SpiNNaker (SpiNNaker 2) neuromorphic system: keyword spotting and adaptive robotic control. Keyword spotting is commonly used in smart speakers to listen for wake words, and adaptive control...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNeuromorphic computing and engineering Vol. 1; no. 1; p. 14002
Main Authors Yan, Yexin, Stewart, Terrence C, Choo, Xuan, Vogginger, Bernhard, Partzsch, Johannes, Höppner, Sebastian, Kelber, Florian, Eliasmith, Chris, Furber, Steve, Mayr, Christian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IOP Publishing 01.09.2021
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ISSN2634-4386
2634-4386
DOI10.1088/2634-4386/abf150

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Summary:Abstract We implemented two neural network based benchmark tasks on a prototype chip of the second-generation SpiNNaker (SpiNNaker 2) neuromorphic system: keyword spotting and adaptive robotic control. Keyword spotting is commonly used in smart speakers to listen for wake words, and adaptive control is used in robotic applications to adapt to unknown dynamics in an online fashion. We highlight the benefit of a multiply-accumulate (MAC) array in the SpiNNaker 2 prototype which is ordinarily used in rate-based machine learning networks when employed in a neuromorphic, spiking context. In addition, the same benchmark tasks have been implemented on the Loihi neuromorphic chip, giving a side-by-side comparison regarding power consumption and computation time. While Loihi shows better efficiency when less complicated vector-matrix multiplication is involved, with the MAC array, the SpiNNaker 2 prototype shows better efficiency when high dimensional vector-matrix multiplication is involved.
NRC publication: Yes
ISSN:2634-4386
2634-4386
DOI:10.1088/2634-4386/abf150