This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.

Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.

Displaying 1 - 3 of 3
Filtering by

Clear all filters

189353-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
In recent years, Artificial Intelligence (AI) (e.g., Deep Neural Networks (DNNs), Transformer) has shown great success in real-world applications due to its superior performance in various cognitive tasks. The impressive performance achieved by AI models normally accompanies the cost of enormous model size and high computational complexity, which significantly hampers

In recent years, Artificial Intelligence (AI) (e.g., Deep Neural Networks (DNNs), Transformer) has shown great success in real-world applications due to its superior performance in various cognitive tasks. The impressive performance achieved by AI models normally accompanies the cost of enormous model size and high computational complexity, which significantly hampers their implementation on resource-limited Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS), Internet-of-Things (IoT), or Edge systems due to their tightly constrained energy, computing, size, and memory budget. Thus, the urgent demand for enhancing the \textbf{Efficiency} of DNN has drawn significant research interests across various communities. Motivated by the aforementioned concerns, this doctoral research has been mainly focusing on Enabling Deep Learning at Edge: From Efficient and Dynamic Inference to On-Device Learning. Specifically, from the inference perspective, this dissertation begins by investigating a hardware-friendly model compression method that effectively reduces the size of AI model while simultaneously achieving improved speed on edge devices. Additionally, due to the fact that diverse resource constraints of different edge devices, this dissertation further explores dynamic inference, which allows for real-time tuning of inference model size, computation, and latency to accommodate the limitations of each edge device. Regarding efficient on-device learning, this dissertation starts by analyzing memory usage during transfer learning training. Based on this analysis, a novel framework called "Reprogramming Network'' (Rep-Net) is introduced that offers a fresh perspective on the on-device transfer learning problem. The Rep-Net enables on-device transferlearning by directly learning to reprogram the intermediate features of a pre-trained model. Lastly, this dissertation studies an efficient continual learning algorithm that facilitates learning multiple tasks without the risk of forgetting previously acquired knowledge. In practice, through the exploration of task correlation, an interesting phenomenon is observed that the intermediate features are highly correlated between tasks with the self-supervised pre-trained model. Building upon this observation, a novel approach called progressive task-correlated layer freezing is proposed to gradually freeze a subset of layers with the highest correlation ratios for each task leading to training efficiency.
ContributorsYang, Li (Author) / Fan, Deliang (Thesis advisor) / Seo, Jae-Sun (Committee member) / Zhang, Junshan (Committee member) / Cao, Yu (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
161984-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The rapid growth of Internet-of-things (IoT) and artificial intelligence applications have called forth a new computing paradigm--edge computing. Edge computing applications, such as video surveillance, autonomous driving, and augmented reality, are highly computationally intensive and require real-time processing. Current edge systems are typically based on commodity general-purpose hardware such as

The rapid growth of Internet-of-things (IoT) and artificial intelligence applications have called forth a new computing paradigm--edge computing. Edge computing applications, such as video surveillance, autonomous driving, and augmented reality, are highly computationally intensive and require real-time processing. Current edge systems are typically based on commodity general-purpose hardware such as Central Processing Units (CPUs) and Graphical Processing Units (GPUs) , which are mainly designed for large, non-time-sensitive jobs in the cloud and do not match the needs of the edge workloads. Also, these systems are usually power hungry and are not suitable for resource-constrained edge deployments. Such application-hardware mismatch calls forth a new computing backbone to support the high-bandwidth, low-latency, and energy-efficient requirements. Also, the new system should be able to support a variety of edge applications with different characteristics. This thesis addresses the above challenges by studying the use of Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) -based computing systems for accelerating the edge workloads, from three critical angles. First, it investigates the feasibility of FPGAs for edge computing, in comparison to conventional CPUs and GPUs. Second, it studies the acceleration of common algorithmic characteristics, identified as loop patterns, using FPGAs, and develops a benchmark tool for analyzing the performance of these patterns on different accelerators. Third, it designs a new edge computing platform using multiple clustered FPGAs to provide high-bandwidth and low-latency acceleration of convolutional neural networks (CNNs) widely used in edge applications. Finally, it studies the acceleration of the emerging neural networks, randomly-wired neural networks, on the multi-FPGA platform. The experimental results from this work show that the new generation of workloads requires rethinking the current edge-computing architecture. First, through the acceleration of common loops, it demonstrates that FPGAs can outperform GPUs in specific loops types up to 14 times. Second, it shows the linear scalability of multi-FPGA platforms in accelerating neural networks. Third, it demonstrates the superiority of the new scheduler to optimally place randomly-wired neural networks on multi-FPGA platforms with 81.1 times better throughput than the available scheduling mechanisms.
ContributorsBiookaghazadeh, Saman (Author) / Zhao, Ming (Thesis advisor) / Ren, Fengbo (Thesis advisor) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Seo, Jae-Sun (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
161275-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The Internet-of-Things (IoT) boosts the vast amount of streaming data. However, even considering the growth of the cloud computing infrastructure, IoT devices will generate two orders of magnitude more than the capacity that centralized data center servers can process or store. This trend inevitability calls for the need for offloading

The Internet-of-Things (IoT) boosts the vast amount of streaming data. However, even considering the growth of the cloud computing infrastructure, IoT devices will generate two orders of magnitude more than the capacity that centralized data center servers can process or store. This trend inevitability calls for the need for offloading IoT data processing to a decentralized edge computing infrastructure. On the other hand, deep-learning-based applications gain great progress by taking advantage of heavy centralized computing resources for training large models to fit increasingly complicated tasks. Even though large-scale deep learning models perform well in terms of accuracy, their high computational complexity makes it impossible to offload them onto edge devices for real-time inference and timely response. To enable timely IoT services on edge devices, this dissertation addresses the challenge from two perspectives. On the hardware side, a new field-programmable gate array (FPGA)-based framework for binary neural network and an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) accelerator for natural scene text interpretation are proposed, with the awareness of the computing resources and power constraint on edge. On the algorithm side, this work presents both the methodology of building more compact models and finding better computation-accuracy trade-off for existing models.
ContributorsLi, Yixing (Author) / Ren, Fengbo (Thesis advisor) / Vrudhula, Sarma (Committee member) / Seo, Jae-Sun (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021