Title :
Adaptive competitive self-organizing associative memory
Author :
Athinarayanan, Ragu ; Sayeh, Mohammad R. ; Wood, Dale A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Ind. & Eng. Technol., Southeast Missouri State Univ., Cape Girardeau, MO, USA
fDate :
7/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This work presents the design of an adaptive competitive self-organizing associative memory (ACSAM) system for use in classification and recognition of pattern information. Volterra and Lotka´s models of interacting species in biology motivated the ACSAM model; a model based on a system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations (ODEs). Self-organizing behavior is modeled for unsupervised neural networks employing the concept of interacting/competing species in biology. In this model, self-organizing properties can be implicitly coded within the systems trajectory structure using only ODEs. Among the features of this continuous-time system are: 1) the dynamic behavior is well-understood and characterized; 2) the desired fixed points are the only asymptotically stable states of the system; 3) the trajectories of ACSAM derived from the weight activities of the gradient system have no periodic or homoclinic orbits; and 4) the heteroclinic orbits that exist between equilibrium states are structurally unstable and can be removed by small perturbations.
Keywords :
adaptive systems; content-addressable storage; neural net architecture; pattern classification; pattern recognition; self-organising storage; unsupervised learning; ACSAM; ACSANI model; ODEs; adaptive competitive; associative memory; classification; competitive learning; dynamical systems; interacting species; pattern classification; pattern information; pattern recognition; recognition; self-organizing associative memory; self-organizing systems; unsupervised neural networks; Associative memory; Biological system modeling; Clustering algorithms; Computational biology; Differential equations; Neural networks; Neurons; Orbits; Pattern recognition; Prototypes;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSMCA.2002.804789