Score: 0

FeNN: A RISC-V vector processor for Spiking Neural Network acceleration

Published: June 13, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2506.11760v1

By: Zainab Aizaz, James C. Knight, Thomas Nowotny

Potential Business Impact:

Makes AI use much less power.

Business Areas:
Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) Hardware

Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) have the potential to drastically reduce the energy requirements of AI systems. However, mainstream accelerators like GPUs and TPUs are designed for the high arithmetic intensity of standard ANNs so are not well-suited to SNN simulation. FPGAs are well-suited to applications with low arithmetic intensity as they have high off-chip memory bandwidth and large amounts of on-chip memory. Here, we present a novel RISC-V-based soft vector processor (FeNN), tailored to simulating SNNs on FPGAs. Unlike most dedicated neuromorphic hardware, FeNN is fully programmable and designed to be integrated with applications running on standard computers from the edge to the cloud. We demonstrate that, by using stochastic rounding and saturation, FeNN can achieve high numerical precision with low hardware utilisation and that a single FeNN core can simulate an SNN classifier faster than both an embedded GPU and the Loihi neuromorphic system.

Country of Origin
🇬🇧 United Kingdom

Page Count
7 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Neural and Evolutionary Computing