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A biologically inspired spiking model of visual processing for image feature detection
To enable fast reliable feature matching or tracking in scenes, features need to be discrete and meaningful, and hence edge or corner features, commonly called interest points are often used for this purpose. Experimental research has illustrated that biological vision systems use neuronal circuits to extract particular features such as edges or corners from visual scenes. Inspired by this biological behaviour, this paper proposes a biologically inspired spiking neural network for the purpose of image feature extraction. Standard digital images are processed and converted to spikes in a manner similar to the processing that transforms light into spikes in the retina. Using a hierarchical spiking network, various types of biologically inspired receptive fields are used to extract progressively complex image features. The performance of the network is assessed by examining the repeatability of extracted features with visual results presented using both synthetic and real images
An Efficient Method for online Detection of Polychronous Patterns in Spiking Neural Network
Polychronous neural groups are effective structures for the recognition of
precise spike-timing patterns but the detection method is an inefficient
multi-stage brute force process that works off-line on pre-recorded simulation
data. This work presents a new model of polychronous patterns that can capture
precise sequences of spikes directly in the neural simulation. In this scheme,
each neuron is assigned a randomized code that is used to tag the post-synaptic
neurons whenever a spike is transmitted. This creates a polychronous code that
preserves the order of pre-synaptic activity and can be registered in a hash
table when the post-synaptic neuron spikes. A polychronous code is a
sub-component of a polychronous group that will occur, along with others, when
the group is active. We demonstrate the representational and pattern
recognition ability of polychronous codes on a direction selective visual task
involving moving bars that is typical of a computation performed by simple
cells in the cortex. The computational efficiency of the proposed algorithm far
exceeds existing polychronous group detection methods and is well suited for
online detection.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figure
An AER Spike-Processing Filter Simulator and Automatic VHDL Generator Based on Cellular Automata
Spike-based systems are neuro-inspired circuits implementations
traditionally used for sensory systems or sensor signal processing. Address-Event-
Representation (AER) is a neuromorphic communication protocol for transferring
asynchronous events between VLSI spike-based chips. These neuro-inspired
implementations allow developing complex, multilayer, multichip neuromorphic
systems and have been used to design sensor chips, such as retinas and cochlea,
processing chips, e.g. filters, and learning chips. Furthermore, Cellular Automata
(CA) is a bio-inspired processing model for problem solving. This approach
divides the processing synchronous cells which change their states at the same time
in order to get the solution. This paper presents a software simulator able to gather
several spike-based elements into the same workspace in order to test a CA
architecture based on AER before a hardware implementation. Furthermore this
simulator produces VHDL for testing the AER-CA into the FPGA of the USBAER
AER-tool.Ministerio de Ciencia e InnovaciĂłn TEC2009-10639-C04-0
Deep Neural Networks - A Brief History
Introduction to deep neural networks and their history.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Bio-Inspired Multi-Layer Spiking Neural Network Extracts Discriminative Features from Speech Signals
Spiking neural networks (SNNs) enable power-efficient implementations due to
their sparse, spike-based coding scheme. This paper develops a bio-inspired SNN
that uses unsupervised learning to extract discriminative features from speech
signals, which can subsequently be used in a classifier. The architecture
consists of a spiking convolutional/pooling layer followed by a fully connected
spiking layer for feature discovery. The convolutional layer of leaky,
integrate-and-fire (LIF) neurons represents primary acoustic features. The
fully connected layer is equipped with a probabilistic spike-timing-dependent
plasticity learning rule. This layer represents the discriminative features
through probabilistic, LIF neurons. To assess the discriminative power of the
learned features, they are used in a hidden Markov model (HMM) for spoken digit
recognition. The experimental results show performance above 96% that compares
favorably with popular statistical feature extraction methods. Our results
provide a novel demonstration of unsupervised feature acquisition in an SNN
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