The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.

In many cases, neurons process information carried by the precise timings of spikes. Here we show how neurons can learn to generate specific temporally precise output spikes in response to input patterns of spikes having precise timings, thus processing and memorizing information that is entirely te...

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Main Author: Răzvan V Florian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3412872?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f86f6d4974e34b61876d92391d3ba61d2020-11-24T21:18:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0178e4023310.1371/journal.pone.0040233The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.Răzvan V FlorianIn many cases, neurons process information carried by the precise timings of spikes. Here we show how neurons can learn to generate specific temporally precise output spikes in response to input patterns of spikes having precise timings, thus processing and memorizing information that is entirely temporally coded, both as input and as output. We introduce two new supervised learning rules for spiking neurons with temporal coding of information (chronotrons), one that provides high memory capacity (E-learning), and one that has a higher biological plausibility (I-learning). With I-learning, the neuron learns to fire the target spike trains through synaptic changes that are proportional to the synaptic currents at the timings of real and target output spikes. We study these learning rules in computer simulations where we train integrate-and-fire neurons. Both learning rules allow neurons to fire at the desired timings, with sub-millisecond precision. We show how chronotrons can learn to classify their inputs, by firing identical, temporally precise spike trains for different inputs belonging to the same class. When the input is noisy, the classification also leads to noise reduction. We compute lower bounds for the memory capacity of chronotrons and explore the influence of various parameters on chronotrons' performance. The chronotrons can model neurons that encode information in the time of the first spike relative to the onset of salient stimuli or neurons in oscillatory networks that encode information in the phases of spikes relative to the background oscillation. Our results show that firing one spike per cycle optimizes memory capacity in neurons encoding information in the phase of firing relative to a background rhythm.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3412872?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Răzvan V Florian
spellingShingle Răzvan V Florian
The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Răzvan V Florian
author_sort Răzvan V Florian
title The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
title_short The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
title_full The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
title_fullStr The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
title_full_unstemmed The chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
title_sort chronotron: a neuron that learns to fire temporally precise spike patterns.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description In many cases, neurons process information carried by the precise timings of spikes. Here we show how neurons can learn to generate specific temporally precise output spikes in response to input patterns of spikes having precise timings, thus processing and memorizing information that is entirely temporally coded, both as input and as output. We introduce two new supervised learning rules for spiking neurons with temporal coding of information (chronotrons), one that provides high memory capacity (E-learning), and one that has a higher biological plausibility (I-learning). With I-learning, the neuron learns to fire the target spike trains through synaptic changes that are proportional to the synaptic currents at the timings of real and target output spikes. We study these learning rules in computer simulations where we train integrate-and-fire neurons. Both learning rules allow neurons to fire at the desired timings, with sub-millisecond precision. We show how chronotrons can learn to classify their inputs, by firing identical, temporally precise spike trains for different inputs belonging to the same class. When the input is noisy, the classification also leads to noise reduction. We compute lower bounds for the memory capacity of chronotrons and explore the influence of various parameters on chronotrons' performance. The chronotrons can model neurons that encode information in the time of the first spike relative to the onset of salient stimuli or neurons in oscillatory networks that encode information in the phases of spikes relative to the background oscillation. Our results show that firing one spike per cycle optimizes memory capacity in neurons encoding information in the phase of firing relative to a background rhythm.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3412872?pdf=render
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