Abstract

Because reservoir computers are high dimensional dynamical systems, designing a good reservoir computer is difficult. In many cases, the designer must search a large nonlinear parameter space, and each step of the search requires simulating the full reservoir computer. In this work, I show that a simple statistic based on the mean path length between nodes in the reservoir computer is correlated with better reservoir computer performance. The statistic predicts the diversity of signals produced by the reservoir computer, as measured by the covariance matrix of the reservoir computer. This statistic by itself is not sufficient to predict reservoir computer performance because not only must the reservoir computer produce a diverse set of signals, it must be well matched to the training signals. Nevertheless, this path length statistic allows the designer to eliminate some network configurations from consideration without having to actually simulate the reservoir computer, reducing the complexity of the design process.

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