Conference Paper 2021

Reservoir computing with self-organizing neural oscillators

Reservoir computing is a powerful computational framework that is particularly successful in time-series prediction tasks. It utilises a brain-inspired recurrent neural network and allows biologically plausible learning without backpropagation. Reservoir computing has relied extensively on the self-organizing properties of biological spiking neural networks. We examine the ability of a rate-based network of neural oscillators to take advantage of the self-organizing properties of synaptic plasticity. We show that such models can solve complex tasks and benefit from synaptic plasticity, which increases their performance and robustness. Our results further motivate the study of self-organizing biologically inspired computational models that do not exclusively rely on end-to-end training.

Author(s): Khajehabdollahi, S and Giannakakis, E and Prosi, J and Levina, A
Book Title: Artificial Life Conference Proceedings
Volume: 2021
Pages: 1--3
Year: 2021
Publisher: MIT Press
Bibtex Type: Conference Paper (inproceedings)
Address: Praha, Czech Republic
DOI: 10.1162/isal\textunderscorea\textunderscore00409
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@inproceedings{item_3332552,
  title = {{Reservoir computing with self-organizing neural oscillators}},
  booktitle = {{Artificial Life Conference Proceedings}},
  abstract = {Reservoir computing is a powerful computational framework that is particularly successful in time-series prediction tasks. It utilises a brain-inspired recurrent neural network and allows biologically plausible learning without backpropagation. Reservoir computing has relied extensively on the self-organizing properties of biological spiking neural networks. We examine the ability of a rate-based network of neural oscillators to take advantage of the self-organizing properties of synaptic plasticity. We show that such models can solve complex tasks and benefit from synaptic plasticity, which increases their performance and robustness. Our results further motivate the study of self-organizing biologically inspired computational models that do not exclusively rely on end-to-end training.},
  volume = {2021},
  pages = {1--3},
  publisher = {MIT Press},
  address = {Praha, Czech Republic},
  year = {2021},
  slug = {item_3332552},
  author = {Khajehabdollahi, S and Giannakakis, E and Prosi, J and Levina, A}
}