IEEE Circuits and Systems: Hai Li, "Deep Learning and Neuromorphic Computing"

Tuesday, December 4, 2018
7:00 p.m.
2460 A.V. Williams Bldg.
Pamela Abshire
pabshire@umd.edu

IEEE Circuits & Systems Distinguished Lecture

Deep Learning and Neuromorphic Computing—Technology, Hardware and Implementation

Hai Li
Clare Boothe Luce Associate Professor
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Duke University

Lecture at 7 pm; food and networking begin at 6 pm

Host: Pamela Abshire

Abstract
As big data processing becomes pervasive and ubiquitous in our lives, the desire for embedded-everywhere and human-centric information systems calls for an intelligent computing paradigm that is capable of handling large volume of data through massively parallel operations under limited hardware and power resources. This demand, however, is unlikely to be satisfied through the traditional computer systems whose performance is greatly hindered by the increasing performance gap between CPU and memory as well as the fast-growing power consumption. Inspired by the working mechanism of human brains, a neuromorphic system naturally possesses a massively parallel architecture with closely coupled memory, offering a great opportunity to break the "memory wall" in von Neumann architecture. The tutorial will start with the evolution of neural networks, followed by the acceleration on conventional platform. I will then introduce the neuromorphic system designs including the approaches based on CMOS and emerging nanotechnologies. The latest research outcomes on hardware implementation optimization, the reliability and robustness control schemes, and new training methodologies by taking the hardware constraints into the consideration will then be presented. At last, new applications and challenges raised in deep learning and neuromorphic computing will be discussed. 

Biography
Hai “Helen” Li is currently Clare Boothe Luce Associate Professor with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Duke University. She has authored or co-authored over 200 technical papers published in peer-reviewed journals and conferences and holds 70+ granted U.S. patents. She authored a book entitled Nonvolatile Memory Design: Magnetic, Resistive, and Phase Changing (CRC Press, 2011). Her current research interests include memory design and architecture, neuromorphic architecture for brain-inspired computing systems, and architecture/circuit/device cross-layer optimization for low power and high performance. Dr. Li serves as Associate Editor for a number of IEEE and ACM journals. She has served as organization committee and technical program committee members for over 30 international conference series. She received the NSF CAREER Award (2012), the DARPA YFA Award (2013), TUM-IAS Hans Fisher Fellowship (2017), seven best paper awards and another seven best paper nominations. Dr. Li is a senior member of IEEE and a distinguished member of ACM. 

Audience: Public 

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