4.6 Article

Synaptic Plasticity in Memristive Artificial Synapses and Their Robustness Against Noisy Inputs

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.660894

Keywords

artificial synapse; resistive switching; synaptic plasticity; neuronal noise; spike-timing dependent plasticity; cycle-number dependent plasticity; generalized frequency-dependent plasticity; unconventional neuromorphic computing

Categories

Funding

  1. DFG (German Research Foundation) Priority Program NanoSecurity, Project MemCrypto [439827659]
  2. Fraunhofer Internal Programs [600768]
  3. Fraunhofer Society
  4. German Research Foundation
  5. Open Access Publication Fund of the Thueringer Universitaets- und Landesbibliothek Jena project [433052568]

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BiFeO3(BFO) artificial synapses exhibit various long-term plasticity functions depending on time, cycles, and frequency, with their learning windows capable of wide time scale configurability based on applied waveforms. In addition, a study on generalized frequency-dependent plasticity reveals that modulation of pulse width and pulse interval time within one spike cycle can lead to both synaptic potentiation and depression effects.
Emerging brain-inspired neuromorphic computing paradigms require devices that can emulate the complete functionality of biological synapses upon different neuronal activities in order to process big data flows in an efficient and cognitive manner while being robust against any noisy input. The memristive device has been proposed as a promising candidate for emulating artificial synapses due to their complex multilevel and dynamical plastic behaviors. In this work, we exploit ultrastable analog BiFeO3(BFO)-based memristive devices for experimentally demonstrating that BFO artificial synapses support various long-term plastic functions, i.e., spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP), cycle number-dependent plasticity (CNDP), and spiking rate-dependent plasticity (SRDP). The study on the impact of electrical stimuli in terms of pulse width and amplitude on STDP behaviors shows that their learning windows possess a wide range of timescale configurability, which can be a function of applied waveform. Moreover, beyond SRDP, the systematical and comparative study on generalized frequency-dependent plasticity (FDP) is carried out, which reveals for the first time that the ratio modulation between pulse width and pulse interval time within one spike cycle can result in both synaptic potentiation and depression effect within the same firing frequency. The impact of intrinsic neuronal noise on the STDP function of a single BFO artificial synapse can be neglected because thermal noise is two orders of magnitude smaller than the writing voltage and because the cycle-to-cycle variation of the current-voltage characteristics of a single BFO artificial synapses is small. However, extrinsic voltage fluctuations, e.g., in neural networks, cause a noisy input into the artificial synapses of the neural network. Here, the impact of extrinsic neuronal noise on the STDP function of a single BFO artificial synapse is analyzed in order to understand the robustness of plastic behavior in memristive artificial synapses against extrinsic noisy input.

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