3,784 research outputs found
Analog VLSI-Based Modeling of the Primate Oculomotor System
One way to understand a neurobiological system is by building a simulacrum that replicates its behavior in real time using similar constraints. Analog very large-scale integrated (VLSI) electronic circuit technology provides such an enabling technology. We here describe a neuromorphic system that is part of a long-term effort to understand the primate oculomotor system. It requires both fast sensory processing and fast motor control to interact with the world. A one-dimensional hardware model of the primate eye has been built that simulates the physical dynamics of the biological system. It is driven by two different analog VLSI chips, one mimicking cortical visual processing for target selection and tracking and another modeling brain stem circuits that drive the eye muscles. Our oculomotor plant demonstrates both smooth pursuit movements, driven by a retinal velocity error signal, and saccadic eye movements, controlled by retinal position error, and can reproduce several behavioral, stimulation, lesion, and adaptation experiments performed on primates
An Auditory Localization and Coordinate Transform Chip
The localization and orientation to various novel or interesting events in the environment is a critical sensorimotor ability in all animals, predator or prey. In mammals, the superior colliculus (SC) plays a major role in this behavior, the deeper layers exhibiting
topographically mapped responses to visual, auditory, and
somatosensory stimuli. Sensory information arriving from different modalities should then be represented in the same coordinate frame. Auditory cues, in particular, are thought to be computed in head-based coordinates which must then be transformed to retinal coordinates. In this paper, an analog VLSI implementation for auditory localization in the azimuthal plane is described which extends
the architecture proposed for the barn owl to a primate eye
movement system where further transformation is required. This transformation is intended to model the projection in primates from auditory cortical areas to the deeper layers of the primate superior colliculus. This system is interfaced with an analog VLSI-based
saccadic eye movement system also being constructed in our laboratory
Frontiers in Neuromorphic Engineering
Neurobiological processing systems are remarkable computational devices. They use slow, stochastic, and inhomogeneous computing elements and yet they outperform todayâs most powerful computers at tasks such as vision, audition, and motor control, tasks that we perform nearly every moment that we are awake without much conscious thought or concern. Despite the vast amount of resources dedicated to the research and development of computing, information, and communication technologies, todayâs fastest and largest computers are still not able to match biological systems at robustly accomplishing real-worl
Microscopic study of 4-alpha-particle condensation with proper treatment of resonances
The 4-alpha condensate state for ^{16}O is discussed with the THSR
(Tohsaki-Horiuchi-Schuck-Roepke) wave function which has alpha-particle
condensate character. Taking into account a proper treatment of resonances, it
is found that the 4-alpha THSR wave function yields a fourth 0^+ state in the
continuum above the 4-alpha-breakup threshold in addition to the three 0^+
states obtained in a previous analysis. It is shown that this fourth 0^+
((0_4^+)_{THSR}) state has an analogous structure to the Hoyle state, since it
has a very dilute density and a large component of alpha+^{12}C(0_2^+)
configuration. Furthermore, single-alpha motions are extracted from the
microscopic 16-nucleon wave function, and the condensate fraction and momentum
distribution of alpha particles are quantitatively discussed. It is found that
for the (0_4^+)_{THSR} state a large alpha-particle occupation probability
concentrates on a single-alpha 0S orbit and the alpha-particle momentum
distribution has a delta-function-like peak at zero momentum, both indicating
that the state has a strong 4-alpha condensate character. It is argued that the
(0_4^+)_{THSR} state is the counterpart of the 0_6^+ state which was obtained
as the 4-alpha condensate state in the previous 4-alpha OCM (Orthogonality
Condition Model) calculation, and therefore is likely to correspond to the
0_6^+ state observed at 15.1 MeV.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, submitted to PRC
Phase-shift calculation using continuum-discretized states
We present a method for calculating scattering phase shifts which utilizes
continuum-discretized states obtained in a bound-state type calculation. The
wrong asymptotic behavior of the discretized state is remedied by means of the
Green's function formalism. Test examples confirm the accuracy of the method.
The scattering is described using realistic nucleon-nucleon
potentials. The and phase shifts obtained in a single-channel
calculation are too small in comparison with experiment. The phase
shifts are in reasonable agreement with experiment, and gain contributions both
from the tensor and central components of the nucleon-nucleon potential.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
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