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Autocorrelations from emergent bistability in homeostatic spiking neural networks on neuromorphic hardware

Authors :
Cramer, Benjamin
Kreft, Markus
Billaudelle, Sebastian
Karasenko, Vitali
Leibfried, Aron
Müller, Eric
Spilger, Philipp
Weis, Johannes
Schemmel, Johannes
Muñoz, Miguel A.
Priesemann, Viola
Zierenberg, Johannes
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

A unique feature of neuromorphic computing is that memory is an implicit part of processing through traces of past information in the system's collective dynamics. The extent of memory about past inputs is commonly quantified by the autocorrelation time of collective dynamics. Based on past experimental evidence, a potential explanation for the underlying autocorrelations are close-to-critical fluctuations. Here, we show for self-organized networks of excitatory and inhibitory leaky integrate-and-fire neurons that autocorrelations can originate from emergent bistability upon reducing external input strength. We identify the bistability as a fluctuation-induced stochastic switching between metastable active and quiescent states in the vicinity of a non-equilibrium phase transition. This bistability occurs for networks with fixed heterogeneous weights as a consequence of homeostatic self-organization during development. Specifically, in our experiments on neuromorphic hardware and in computer simulations, the emergent bistability gives rise to autocorrelation times exceeding 500 ms despite single-neuron timescales of only 20 ms. Our results provide the first verification of biologically compatible autocorrelation times in networks of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons, which here are not generated by close-to-critical fluctuations but by emergent bistability in homeostatically regulated networks. Our results thereby constitute a new, complementary mechanism for emergent autocorrelations in networks of spiking neurons, with implications for biological and artificial networks, and introduces the general paradigm of fluctuation-induced bistability for driven systems with absorbing states.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2208.08329
Document Type :
Working Paper