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Low-Latency In Situ Image Analytics With FPGA-Based Quantized Convolutional Neural Network.

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Real-time in situ image analytics impose stringent latency requirements on intelligent neural network inference operations. While conventional software-based implementations on the graphic processing unit (GPU)-accelerated platforms are flexible and have… Click to show full abstract

Real-time in situ image analytics impose stringent latency requirements on intelligent neural network inference operations. While conventional software-based implementations on the graphic processing unit (GPU)-accelerated platforms are flexible and have achieved very high inference throughput, they are not suitable for latency-sensitive applications where real-time feedback is needed. Here, we demonstrate that high-performance reconfigurable computing platforms based on field-programmable gate array (FPGA) processing can successfully bridge the gap between low-level hardware processing and high-level intelligent image analytics algorithm deployment within a unified system. The proposed design performs inference operations on a stream of individual images as they are produced and has a deeply pipelined hardware design that allows all layers of a quantized convolutional neural network (QCNN) to compute concurrently with partial image inputs. Using the case of label-free classification of human peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) subtypes as a proof-of-concept illustration, our system achieves an ultralow classification latency of 34.2 μs with over 95% end-to-end accuracy by using a QCNN, while the cells are imaged at throughput exceeding 29,200 cells/s. Our QCNN design is modular and is readily adaptable to other QCNNs with different latency and resource requirements.

Keywords: neural network; image analytics; image; latency; situ image

Journal Title: IEEE transactions on neural networks and learning systems
Year Published: 2021

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