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Presynaptic Spike-Driven Spike Timing-Dependent Plasticity With Address Event Representation for Large-Scale Neuromorphic Systems

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Learning plays an important role in the brain to make it adaptive to dynamical environments. This paper presents a presynaptic spike-driven spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) learning rule in the address… Click to show full abstract

Learning plays an important role in the brain to make it adaptive to dynamical environments. This paper presents a presynaptic spike-driven spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) learning rule in the address domain for a neuromorphic architecture using a synaptic connectivity table in an external memory at a local routing node. We contribute two aspects to the implementation of the learning rule for extended large-scale neuromorphic systems. First, we reduced buffer sizes required for tracing a spike train which is required to pair all presynaptic and postsynaptic spike for an STDP time window. This method implements an exponential decay STDP function with two parameters: the latest timestamp and the synaptic modification rate at the latest timestamp. It reduces the required buffer size compared to previous works. Second, we resolve a lack of reverse lookup table issue with the presynaptic spike-driven algorithm. The proposed algorithm holds causal updates at postsynaptic spikes until a next presynaptic spike arrival. This approach removes the need of a reverse lookup table required at a postsynaptic spike. We show the implementation of the proposed algorithm in an FPGA device and validate it with a spiking neural network configuration. The experiment results show the proposed algorithm is comparable qualitatively with a conventional STDP learning rule.

Keywords: spike timing; spike driven; driven spike; presynaptic spike; timing dependent; spike

Journal Title: IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers
Year Published: 2020

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