Title :
Plasticity recurrent spiking neural networks for olfactory pattern recognition
Author :
Allen, J.N. ; Abdel-Aty-Zohdy, H.S. ; Ewing, R.L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Syst. Eng., Oakland Univ., Rochester, MI
Abstract :
This paper introduces a novel spiking neural network methodology, and applies it to an odorant learning and detection application. Spike-time dependent plasticity can support coding schemes that are based on spatio-temporal spike patterns. Spiking (or pulsed) neural networks (SNNs) are models which explicitly take into account the timing of inputs. The network input and output are usually represented as series of spikes (delta function or more complex shapes). Plasticity SNNs have an advantage of being able to recurrently process information. Spike-time dependent plasticity can enhance signal transmission by selectively strengthening synaptic connections that transmit precisely timed spikes at the expense of those synapses that transmit poorly timed spikes. Complete theory describes the spiking network´s digital implementation. Theory is verified using simulation of a biologically plausible odor environment with 1023 odor receptor inputs. Stochastic on-chip learning uses sampling and a correlation filter to learn odors despite noisy environment conditions. Simulation and Verilog chip design are tested on a field programmable gate array. A scalable field programmable gate array implementation with 1024 inputs, 1 output, and expansion capability for unlimited outputs is synthesized into 87,062 gates
Keywords :
field programmable gate arrays; hardware description languages; learning (artificial intelligence); neural nets; pattern recognition; signal detection; signal processing; SNN; Verilog chip design; delta function; field programmable gate array; information processing; odorant detection; odorant learning; olfactory pattern recognition; plasticity recurrent spiking neural networks; signal transmission; spatiotemporal spike patterns; spike-time dependent plasticity; spiking neural network methodology; stochastic on-chip learning; synaptic connections; Biological system modeling; Field programmable gate arrays; Neural networks; Olfactory; Pattern recognition; Recurrent neural networks; Sampling methods; Shape; Stochastic processes; Timing;
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems, 2005. 48th Midwest Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Covington, KY
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9197-7
DOI :
10.1109/MWSCAS.2005.1594457