Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity
The development of power-efficient neuromorphic devices presents the challenge of designing spike pattern classification algorithms which can be implemented on low-precision hardware and can also achieve state-of-the-art performance. In our pursuit of meeting this challenge, we present a pattern cla...
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Structural plasticity Active dendrite Hussain, Shaista Basu, Arindam Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity |
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The development of power-efficient neuromorphic devices presents the challenge of designing spike pattern classification algorithms which can be implemented on low-precision hardware and can also achieve state-of-the-art performance. In our pursuit of meeting this challenge, we present a pattern classification model which uses a sparse connection matrix and exploits the mechanism of nonlinear dendritic processing to achieve high classification accuracy. A rate-based structural learning rule for multiclass classification is proposed which modifies a connectivity matrix of binary synaptic connections by choosing the best “k” out of “d” inputs to make connections on every dendritic branch (k < < d). Because learning only modifies connectivity, the model is well suited for implementation in neuromorphic systems using address-event representation (AER). We develop an ensemble method which combines several dendritic classifiers to achieve enhanced generalization over individual classifiers. We have two major findings: (1) Our results demonstrate that an ensemble created with classifiers comprising moderate number of dendrites performs better than both ensembles of perceptrons and of complex dendritic trees. (2) In order to determine the moderate number of dendrites required for a specific classification problem, a two-step solution is proposed. First, an adaptive approach is proposed which scales the relative size of the dendritic trees of neurons for each class. It works by progressively adding dendrites with fixed number of synapses to the network, thereby allocating synaptic resources as per the complexity of the given problem. As a second step, theoretical capacity calculations are used to convert each neuronal dendritic tree to its optimal topology where dendrites of each class are assigned different number of synapses. The performance of the model is evaluated on classification of handwritten digits from the benchmark MNIST dataset and compared with other spike classifiers. We show that our system can achieve classification accuracy within 1 − 2% of other reported spike-based classifiers while using much less synaptic resources (only 7%) compared to that used by other methods. Further, an ensemble classifier created with adaptively learned sizes can attain accuracy of 96.4% which is at par with the best reported performance of spike-based classifiers. Moreover, the proposed method achieves this by using about 20% of the synapses used by other spike algorithms. We also present results of applying our algorithm to classify the MNIST-DVS dataset collected from a real spike-based image sensor and show results comparable to the best reported ones (88.1% accuracy). For VLSI implementations, we show that the reduced synaptic memory can save upto 4X area compared to conventional crossbar topologies. Finally, we also present a biologically realistic spike-based version for calculating the correlations required by the structural learning rule and demonstrate the correspondence between the rate-based and spike-based methods of learning. |
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School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering |
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School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Hussain, Shaista Basu, Arindam |
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Hussain, Shaista Basu, Arindam |
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Hussain, Shaista |
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Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity |
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Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity |
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Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity |
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Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity |
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Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity |
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multiclass classification by adaptive network of dendritic neurons with binary synapses using structural plasticity |
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2016 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/81511 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/40847 |
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-815112022-02-16T16:26:58Z Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity Hussain, Shaista Basu, Arindam School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Structural plasticity Active dendrite The development of power-efficient neuromorphic devices presents the challenge of designing spike pattern classification algorithms which can be implemented on low-precision hardware and can also achieve state-of-the-art performance. In our pursuit of meeting this challenge, we present a pattern classification model which uses a sparse connection matrix and exploits the mechanism of nonlinear dendritic processing to achieve high classification accuracy. A rate-based structural learning rule for multiclass classification is proposed which modifies a connectivity matrix of binary synaptic connections by choosing the best “k” out of “d” inputs to make connections on every dendritic branch (k < < d). Because learning only modifies connectivity, the model is well suited for implementation in neuromorphic systems using address-event representation (AER). We develop an ensemble method which combines several dendritic classifiers to achieve enhanced generalization over individual classifiers. We have two major findings: (1) Our results demonstrate that an ensemble created with classifiers comprising moderate number of dendrites performs better than both ensembles of perceptrons and of complex dendritic trees. (2) In order to determine the moderate number of dendrites required for a specific classification problem, a two-step solution is proposed. First, an adaptive approach is proposed which scales the relative size of the dendritic trees of neurons for each class. It works by progressively adding dendrites with fixed number of synapses to the network, thereby allocating synaptic resources as per the complexity of the given problem. As a second step, theoretical capacity calculations are used to convert each neuronal dendritic tree to its optimal topology where dendrites of each class are assigned different number of synapses. The performance of the model is evaluated on classification of handwritten digits from the benchmark MNIST dataset and compared with other spike classifiers. We show that our system can achieve classification accuracy within 1 − 2% of other reported spike-based classifiers while using much less synaptic resources (only 7%) compared to that used by other methods. Further, an ensemble classifier created with adaptively learned sizes can attain accuracy of 96.4% which is at par with the best reported performance of spike-based classifiers. Moreover, the proposed method achieves this by using about 20% of the synapses used by other spike algorithms. We also present results of applying our algorithm to classify the MNIST-DVS dataset collected from a real spike-based image sensor and show results comparable to the best reported ones (88.1% accuracy). For VLSI implementations, we show that the reduced synaptic memory can save upto 4X area compared to conventional crossbar topologies. Finally, we also present a biologically realistic spike-based version for calculating the correlations required by the structural learning rule and demonstrate the correspondence between the rate-based and spike-based methods of learning. MOE (Min. of Education, S’pore) Published version 2016-06-29T08:53:18Z 2019-12-06T14:32:38Z 2016-06-29T08:53:18Z 2019-12-06T14:32:38Z 2016 Journal Article Hussain, S., & Basu, A. (2016). Multiclass Classification by Adaptive Network of Dendritic Neurons with Binary Synapses Using Structural Plasticity. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 10, 113-. 1662-4548 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/81511 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/40847 10.3389/fnins.2016.00113 27065782 en Frontiers in Neuroscience © 2016 Hussain and Basu. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms. 19 p. application/pdf |