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Intelligent Reservoir Generation for Liquid State Machines using Evolutionary Optimization

Neuromorphic Computing is a burgeoning field of research. Many groups are exploring hardware architectures and theoretical ideas about spiking recurrent neural networks. The overarching goal is to exploit the low power promise of these neuromorphic systems. However, it is difficult to train spiking...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reynolds, John J. M., Plank, James S., Schuman, Catherine D.
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
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Summary:Neuromorphic Computing is a burgeoning field of research. Many groups are exploring hardware architectures and theoretical ideas about spiking recurrent neural networks. The overarching goal is to exploit the low power promise of these neuromorphic systems. However, it is difficult to train spiking recurrent neural networks (SRNNs) to perform tasks and make efficient use of neuromorphic hardware. Reservoir Computing is an attractive methodology because it requires no tuning of weights for the reservoir itself. Yet, to find optimal reservoirs, manual tuning of hyperparameters such as hidden neurons, synaptic density, and natural structure is still required. Because of this, researchers often have to generate and evaluate many networks, which can result in non-trivial amounts of computation. This paper employs the reservoir computing technique (specifically liquid state machines) and genetic algorithms in order to develop useful networks that can be deployed on neuromorphic hardware. We build on past work in reservoir computing and genetic algorithms to demonstrate the power of combining these two techniques and the advantage it can provide over manually tuning reservoirs for use on classification tasks. We discuss the complexities of determining whether or not to use the genetic algorithms approach for liquid state machine generation.
ISSN:2161-4407
DOI:10.1109/IJCNN.2019.8852472