SpiNNaker: A 1-W 18-core system-on-chip for massively-parallel neural network simulation

E Painkras, LA Plana, J Garside… - IEEE Journal of Solid …, 2013 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
E Painkras, LA Plana, J Garside, S Temple, F Galluppi, C Patterson, DR Lester, AD Brown…
IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 2013ieeexplore.ieee.org
The modelling of large systems of spiking neurons is computationally very demanding in
terms of processing power and communication. SpiNNaker-Spiking Neural Network
architecture-is a massively parallel computer system designed to provide a cost-effective
and flexible simulator for neuroscience experiments. It can model up to a billion neurons and
a trillion synapses in biological real time. The basic building block is the SpiNNaker Chip
Multiprocessor (CMP), which is a custom-designed globally asynchronous locally …
The modelling of large systems of spiking neurons is computationally very demanding in terms of processing power and communication. SpiNNaker - Spiking Neural Network architecture - is a massively parallel computer system designed to provide a cost-effective and flexible simulator for neuroscience experiments. It can model up to a billion neurons and a trillion synapses in biological real time. The basic building block is the SpiNNaker Chip Multiprocessor (CMP), which is a custom-designed globally asynchronous locally synchronous (GALS) system with 18 ARM968 processor nodes residing in synchronous islands, surrounded by a lightweight, packet-switched asynchronous communications infrastructure. In this paper, we review the design requirements for its very demanding target application, the SpiNNaker micro-architecture and its implementation issues. We also evaluate the SpiNNaker CMP, which contains 100 million transistors in a 102-mm 2 die, provides a peak performance of 3.96 GIPS, and has a peak power consumption of 1 W when all processor cores operate at the nominal frequency of 180 MHz. SpiNNaker chips are fully operational and meet their power and performance requirements.
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