Abstract

The general principle of combining information processing modules in a feed-forward manner, to sequentially process input until the desired output has been generated, is well understood and widely used. In contrast, biological neural circuits often consist of recurrently connected modules, with each module’s units encoding a different aspect of the modeled world [1,3]. No engineering principles for constructing circuits in this biological pattern are available. We explore this biological approach to circuit synthesis by creating a network of interacting visual maps whose goal is to find a scene interpretation consistent with the input. We construct the network by specifying the modules and their relationships as shown in Figure ​Figure1.1. The network is not hierarchical, and the relationships bi-directional, creating recurrent loops. The input we use is the time derivative (not the magnitude) of the light intensity at each pixel, as provided by an adaptive neuromorphic sensor [2]. Figure 1 (A) Network architecture. R = camera rotation (global 3D vector), F = optic flow (2D vector map), V = pixel positions projected onto sphere at focal point (constant 3D vector map), E = time derivative of light intensity (scalar map), G = spatial gradient ... Since different consistency constraints are located in different parts of the network, information must propagate from the input to the ends of the network and back repeatedly as the network converges to a globally consistent state, a process we refer to as holistic convergence. Because the formula involving the input E leaves F and G underconstrained, one cannot directly infer R and I from it. Only by combining local constraints from all parts of the network can a globally coherent interpretation be obtained. This work demonstrates how a biologically inspired recurrent architecture of modules and local relationships can be designed to interpret noisy or ambiguous data even when there is not a clear feed-forward method to generate the desired interpretation. This provides a new paradigm for the design of information processing systems, based on principles found in biological systems.

Highlights

  • The general principle of combining information processing modules in a feed-forward manner, to sequentially process input until the desired output has been generated, is well understood and widely used

  • We explore this biological approach to circuit synthesis by creating a network of interacting visual maps whose goal is to find a scene interpretation consistent with the input

  • Author details 1Institute of Neuroinformatics, University of Zurich and ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

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Summary

Introduction

The general principle of combining information processing modules in a feed-forward manner, to sequentially process input until the desired output has been generated, is well understood and widely used. We explore this biological approach to circuit synthesis by creating a network of interacting visual maps whose goal is to find a scene interpretation consistent with the input.

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