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pro vyhledávání: '"Saeid Barzegarjalali"'
Autor:
Saeid Barzegarjalali, Alice C. Parker
Publikováno v:
EMBC
We have designed a neuromorphic circuit that models directional selectivity in the visual cortex, where selected neurons fire depending on the direction of object motion, along with the size and orientation of the object. The neuromorphic circuit is
Autor:
Alice C. Parker, Saeid Barzegarjalali
Publikováno v:
EMBC
Research shows that the way we remember things for a few seconds is a different mechanism from the way we remember things for a longer time. Short-term memory is based on persistently firing neurons, whereas storing information for a longer time is b
Autor:
Alice C. Parker, Saeid Barzegarjalali
Publikováno v:
2016 Future Technologies Conference (FTC).
Learning in the human brain is mediated by different forms of plasticity. The circuit processing spatiotemporal inputs we demonstrate here highlights the mechanisms and role of structural plasticity. In many neuromorphic systems, synaptic plasticity
Autor:
Alice C. Parker, Saeid Barzegarjalali
Publikováno v:
2016 Future Technologies Conference (FTC).
We have designed a fully-connected neural network implemented as an analog circuit consisting of 8 neurons and 64 synapses that can learn rules of 2-by-2 Sudoku or Sudoku-like puzzles and then can solve them. In this circuit, learning is mediated by
Publikováno v:
SoCC
The CORTICO-STRIATAL-THALAMO-CORTICAL (CSTC) circuit in the brain has an important role in controlling movement and thought. As a consequence, any dysfunction in this circuit may cause movement and psychological disorders. For example, one hypothesis
Publikováno v:
Wireless Computing in Medicine: From Nano to Cloud with Ethical and Legal Implications
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::03c36e58453e618d0723c16a09d28b8e
https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118993620.ch14
https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118993620.ch14
Autor:
Saeid Barzegarjalali, Alice C. Parker
Publikováno v:
BioCAS
The neural system in the human brain can identify regularities in received stimuli and, based on that, predict future stimuli [1]. Neural prediction circuits reduce responses to predictable and thus possibly redundant events. Failures in predictions