Learning Before Filtering: Real-Time Hardware Learning at the Detector Level
By: Boštjan Maček
Potential Business Impact:
Lets computers learn from data instantly.
Advances in sensor technology and automation have ushered in an era of data abundance, where the ability to identify and extract relevant information in real time has become increasingly critical. Traditional filtering approaches, which depend on a priori knowledge, often struggle to adapt to dynamic or unanticipated data features. Machine learning offers a compelling alternative-particularly when training can occur directly at or near the detector. This paper presents a digital hardware architecture designed for real-time neural network training, specifically optimized for high-throughput data ingestion. The design is described in an implementation-independent manner, with detailed analysis of each architectural component and their performance implications. Through system parameterization, the study explores trade-offs between processing speed, model complexity, and hardware resource utilization. Practical examples illustrate how these parameters affect applicability across various use cases. A proof-of-concept implementation on an FPGA demonstrates in-situ training, confirming that computational accuracy is preserved relative to conventional software-based approaches. Moreover, resource estimates indicate that current-generation FPGAs can train networks of approximately 3,500 neurons per chip. The architecture is both scalable and adaptable, representing a significant advancement toward integrating learning directly within detector systems and enabling a new class of extreme-edge, real-time information processing.
Similar Papers
Real-Time Analysis of Unstructured Data with Machine Learning on Heterogeneous Architectures
Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
Helps find tiny particles faster with less power.
Real-Time Analysis of Unstructured Data with Machine Learning on Heterogeneous Architectures
Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
Helps find tiny particles faster and with less power.
Real Time FPGA Based CNNs for Detection, Classification, and Tracking in Autonomous Systems: State of the Art Designs and Optimizations
Hardware Architecture
Makes cameras understand things faster and with less power.