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Quantization of weights of deep neural networks (DNN) has proven to be an effective solution for the purpose of implementing DNNs on edge devices such as mobiles, ASICs and FPGAs, because they have no sufficient resources to support computation involving millions of high precision weights and multiply-accumulate operations. This paper proposes a novel method to compress vectors of high precision weights of DNNs to ternary vectors, namely a cosine similarity based target non-retraining ternary (TNT) compression method. Our method leverages cosine similarity instead of Euclidean distances as commonly used in the literature and succeeds in reducing the size of the search space to find optimal ternary vectors from 3N to N, where N is the dimension of target vectors. As a result, the computational complexity for TNT to find theoretically optimal ternary vectors is only O(N log(N)). Moreover, our experiments show that, when we ternarize models of DNN with high precision parameters, the obtained quantized models can exhibit sufficiently high accuracy so that re-training models is not necessary.
We propose a novel fine-grained quantization (FGQ) method to ternarize pre-trained full precision models, while also constraining activations to 8 and 4-bits. Using this method, we demonstrate a minimal loss in classification accuracy on state-of-the
This paper addresses a challenging problem - how to reduce energy consumption without incurring performance drop when deploying deep neural networks (DNNs) at the inference stage. In order to alleviate the computation and storage burdens, we propose
Predicting the future behavior of moving agents is essential for real world applications. It is challenging as the intent of the agent and the corresponding behavior is unknown and intrinsically multimodal. Our key insight is that for prediction with
The computation and storage requirements for Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) are usually high. This issue limits their deployability on ubiquitous computing devices such as smart phones, wearables and autonomous drones. In this paper, we propose ternary
Reducing bit-widths of weights, activations, and gradients of a Neural Network can shrink its storage size and memory usage, and also allow for faster training and inference by exploiting bitwise operations. However, previous attempts for quantizatio