divergence boundary
Understanding the Convergence in Balanced Resonate-and-Fire Neurons
Higuchi, Saya, Bohte, Sander M., Otte, Sebastian
Resonate-and-Fire (RF) neurons are an interesting complementary model for integrator neurons in spiking neural networks (SNNs). Due to their resonating membrane dynamics they can extract frequency patterns within the time domain. While established RF variants suffer from intrinsic shortcomings, the recently proposed balanced resonate-and-fire (BRF) neuron marked a significant methodological advance in terms of task performance, spiking and parameter efficiency, as well as, general stability and robustness, demonstrated for recurrent SNNs in various sequence learning tasks. One of the most intriguing result, however, was an immense improvement in training convergence speed and smoothness, overcoming the typical convergence dilemma in backprop-based SNN training. This paper aims at providing further intuitions about how and why these convergence advantages emerge. We show that BRF neurons, in contrast to well-established ALIF neurons, span a very clean and smooth - almost convex - error landscape. Furthermore, empirical results reveal that the convergence benefits are predominantly coupled with a divergence boundary-aware optimization, a major component of the BRF formulation that addresses the numerical stability of the time-discrete resonator approximation. These results are supported by a formal investigation of the membrane dynamics indicating that the gradient is transferred back through time without loss of magnitude.
Balanced Resonate-and-Fire Neurons
Higuchi, Saya, Kairat, Sebastian, Bohte, Sander M., Otte, Sebastian
The resonate-and-fire (RF) neuron, introduced over two decades ago, is a simple, efficient, yet biologically plausible spiking neuron model, which can extract frequency patterns within the time domain due to its resonating membrane dynamics. However, previous RF formulations suffer from intrinsic shortcomings that limit effective learning and prevent exploiting the principled advantage of RF neurons. Here, we introduce the balanced RF (BRF) neuron, which alleviates some of the intrinsic limitations of vanilla RF neurons and demonstrates its effectiveness within recurrent spiking neural networks (RSNNs) on various sequence learning tasks. We show that networks of BRF neurons achieve overall higher task performance, produce only a fraction of the spikes, and require significantly fewer parameters as compared to modern RSNNs. Moreover, BRF-RSNN consistently provide much faster and more stable training convergence, even when bridging many hundreds of time steps during backpropagation through time (BPTT). These results underscore that our BRF-RSNN is a strong candidate for future large-scale RSNN architectures, further lines of research in SNN methodology, and more efficient hardware implementations.