XL-HD: Extended Learning in Hyperdimensional Computing via Deterministic Projections for In-Memory Accelerators

Abstract

Hyperdimensional computing (HDC) is a promising approach for energy-efficient edge machine learning (ML), where low latency, low power, and tight memory budgets are essential. However, traditional HDC relies on symbolic binding and pseudo-random high-dimensional vectors, which require large dimensionality and heuristic updates to reach competitive accuracy, limiting deployment on edge hardware. We introduce XL-HD, a deterministic, projection-based, fully learnable HDC framework tailored for in-memory acceleration within edge computing systems. The method uses a fixed Sobol sequence to project binary inputs, extending learning beyond conventional HDC. During training, class prototypes are optimized in real-valued space and later binarized, enabling an entirely binary dot-product inference pipeline ideal for IMC hardware such as ReRAM crossbars. XL-HD achieves competitive accuracy on MNIST, UCIHAR, and ISOLET while maintaining a compact IMC-based inference engine with 0.395 \ mm2 area and only 0.40 \ μJ per single-cycle inference.

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