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Zixuan LI Sangyeop LEE Noboru ISHIHARA Hiroyuki ITO
A wireless sensor terminal module of 5cc size (2.5 cm × 2.5 cm × 0.8 cm) that does not require a battery is proposed by integrating three kinds of circuit technologies. (i) a low-power sensor interface: an FM modulation type CMOS sensor interface circuit that can operate with a typical power consumption of 24.5 μW was fabricated by the 0.7-μm CMOS process technology. (ii) power supply to the sensor interface circuit: a wireless power transmission characteristic to a small-sized PCB spiral coil antenna was clarified and applied to the module. (iii) wireless sensing from the module: backscatter communication technology that modulates the signal from the base terminal equipment with sensor information and reflects it, which is used for the low-power sensing operation. The module fabricated includes a rectifier circuit with the PCB spiral coil antenna that receives wireless power transmitted from base terminal equipment by electromagnetic resonance coupling and converts it into DC power and a sensor interface circuit that operates using the power. The interface circuit modulates the received signal with the sensor information and reflects it back to the base terminal. The module could achieve 100 mm communication distance when 0.4 mW power is feeding to the sensor terminal.
Song CHENG Zixuan LI Yongsen WANG Wanbing ZOU Yumei ZHOU Delong SHANG Shushan QIAO
Binary neural networks (BNNs), where both activations and weights are radically quantized to be {-1, +1}, can massively accelerate the run-time performance of convolution neural networks (CNNs) for edge devices, by computation complexity reduction and memory footprint saving. However, the non-differentiable binarizing function used in BNNs, makes the binarized models hard to be optimized, and introduces significant performance degradation than the full-precision models. Many previous works managed to correct the backward gradient of binarizing function with various improved versions of straight-through estimation (STE), or in a gradual approximate approach, but the gradient suppression problem was not analyzed and handled. Thus, we propose a novel gradient corrected approximation (GCA) method to match the discrepancy between binarizing function and backward gradient in a gradual and stable way. Our work has two primary contributions: The first is to approximate the backward gradient of binarizing function using a simple leaky-steep function with variable window size. The second is to correct the gradient approximation by standardizing the backward gradient propagated through binarizing function. Experiment results show that the proposed method outperforms the baseline by 1.5% Top-1 accuracy on ImageNet dataset without introducing extra computation cost.