The high volume of data transmission between the edge sensor and the cloud processor leads to energy and throughput bottlenecks for resource-constrained edge devices focused on computer vision. Hence, researchers are investigating different approaches (e.g., near-sensor processing, in-sensor processing, in-pixel processing) by executing computations closer to the sensor to reduce the transmission bandwidth. Specifically, in-pixel processing for neuromorphic vision sensors (e.g., dynamic vision sensors (DVS)) involves incorporating asynchronous multiply-accumulate (MAC) operations within the pixel array, resulting in improved energy efficiency. In a CMOS implementation, low overhead energy-efficient analog MAC accumulates charges on a passive capacitor; however, the capacitor's limited charge retention time affects the algorithmic integration time choices, impacting the algorithmic accuracy, bandwidth, energy, and training efficiency. Consequently, this results in a design trade-off on the hardware aspect-creating a need for a low-leakage compute unit while maintaining the area and energy benefits. In this work, we present a holistic analysis of the hardware-algorithm co-design trade-off based on the limited integration time posed by the hardware and techniques to improve the leakage performance of the in-pixel analog MAC operations.
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