DocumentCode :
1942911
Title :
Asymmetric Synaptic Plasticity Based on Arbitrary Pre- and Postsynaptic Timing Spikes Using Finite State Model
Author :
Lu, Bing ; Yamada, Walter M. ; Berger, Theodore W.
Author_Institution :
Southern California Univ., Los Angeles
fYear :
2007
fDate :
12-17 Aug. 2007
Firstpage :
841
Lastpage :
846
Abstract :
A new computational synaptic plasticity model is presented to embody the relative firing rates between pre-and postsynaptic spikes. The proposed synaptic plasticity model is developed in two steps. Firstly, a finite state model is used to explain diverse protocols of interactive firing spikes, in which an action is produced over state transition to change synaptic efficacy. The produced action denotes synaptic efficacy change rate reliant on a double-stochastic process. Secondly, the total synaptic efficacy update is defined as a nonlinear bounded function dependent on both synaptic efficacy change rate and previous synaptic efficacy value. The proposed synaptic efficacy model is tested experimentally and shows a high degree of similarities with biological data. The inherently determined critical timing window for pre-and-postsynaptic spike pair has a non-zero time shift for peak potentiation or depression, which agrees with the biological synaptic transmission delays in axons and dendrites. Further, numerical analysis shows that the present model is in agreement with well-accepted synaptic learning rule, BCM.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; neural nets; neurophysiology; physiological models; stochastic processes; asymmetric synaptic plasticity; axons; biological synaptic transmission delay; computational synaptic plasticity model; critical timing window; dendrites; double-stochastic process; finite state model; interactive firing spikes; nonlinear bounded function; nonzero time shift; numerical analysis; postsynaptic timing spikes; presynaptic timing spikes; synaptic efficacy; synaptic learning; Biological system modeling; Computational modeling; Delay effects; Hidden Markov models; Nerve fibers; Neural networks; Protocols; Testing; Timing; USA Councils;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Neural Networks, 2007. IJCNN 2007. International Joint Conference on
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
ISSN :
1098-7576
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1379-9
Electronic_ISBN :
1098-7576
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IJCNN.2007.4371067
Filename :
4371067
Link To Document :
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