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Brain-Inspired Communication Technologies: Information Networks with Continuing Internal Dynamics and Fluctuation
Jun-nosuke TERAMAE Naoki WAKAMIYA
Publication
IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
Vol.E98-B
No.1
pp.153-159 Publication Date: 2015/01/01 Online ISSN: 1745-1345
DOI: 10.1587/transcom.E98.B.153 Type of Manuscript: Special Section PAPER (Special Section on Position Papers Exploring Innovative Intelligence and Technologies in Communications) Category: Keyword: brain, neuron, noise, sparseness, plasticity, liquid state machine,
Full Text: FreePDF(698.9KB)
Summary:
Computation in the brain is realized in complicated, heterogeneous, and extremely large-scale network of neurons. About a hundred billion neurons communicate with each other by action potentials called “spike firings” that are delivered to thousands of other neurons from each. Repeated integration and networking of these spike trains in the network finally form the substance of our cognition, perception, planning, and motor control. Beyond conventional views of neural network mechanisms, recent rapid advances in both experimental and theoretical neuroscience unveil that the brain is a dynamical system to actively treat environmental information rather passively process it. The brain utilizes internal dynamics to realize our resilient and efficient perception and behavior. In this paper, by considering similarities and differences of the brain and information networks, we discuss a possibility of information networks with brain-like continuing internal dynamics. We expect that the proposed networks efficiently realize context-dependent in-network processing. By introducing recent findings of neuroscience about dynamics of the brain, we argue validity and clues for implementation of the proposal.
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