Despite the success of artificial neural networks in solving numerous tasks, they face significant challenges, including difficulties in online adaptation and rapidly increasing energy consumption. As a biologically plausible alternative, spiking neural networks offer promising capabilities for efficient cognitive computing. Recently, a three-element spiking neuron model consisting of a threshold selector, a tunnel diode, and a capacitor was proposed. In this work, we experimentally validate this model using a threshold selector hardware emulator and demonstrate its dynamical equivalence to the biologically plausible Izhikevich neuron model. To evaluate the novel neuron’s applicability for cognitive computing, we implement a liquid state machine (LSM) reservoir architecture with spatially dependent random topology for synaptic weight distribution. Our simulations on the MNIST and Fashion-MNIST benchmarks demonstrate competitive classification accuracy (97.9% and 89.5%, respectively) while offering estimated energy efficiency and processing speed enhancements compared to existing FPGA-based and memristor-based spiking reservoir implementations. The developed reservoir is feasible for processing neuromorphic sensors output, including visual perception tasks.
Pchelko et al. (Fri,) studied this question.