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 resistive grid


A Method for the Design of Stable Lateral Inhibition Networks that is Robust in the Presence of Circuit Parasitics

Neural Information Processing Systems

A serious problem of unwanted spontaneous oscillation often arises with these circuits and renders them unusable in practice. This paper reports a design approach that guarantees such a system will be stable, even though the values of designed elements and parasitic elements in the resistive grid may be unknown. The method is based on a rigorous, somewhat novel mathematical analysis using Tellegen's theorem and the idea of Popov multipliers from control theory. It is thoroughly practical because the criteria are local in the sense that no overall analysis of the interconnected system is required, empirical in the sense that they involve only measurable frequency response data on the individual cells, and robust in the sense that unmodelled parasitic resistances and capacitances in the inter(cid:173) connection network cannot affect the analysis.


Heuristic Dynamic Programming for Adaptive Virtual Synchronous Generators

arXiv.org Machine Learning

In this paper a neural network heuristic dynamic programing (HDP) is used for optimal control of the virtual inertia based control of grid connected three phase inverters. It is shown that the conventional virtual inertia controllers are not suited for non inductive grids. A neural network based controller is proposed to adapt to any impedance angle. Applying an adaptive dynamic programming controller instead of a supervised controlled method enables the system to adjust itself to different conditions. The proposed HDP consists of two subnetworks, critic network and action network. These networks can be trained during the same training cycle to decrease the training time. The simulation results confirm that the proposed neural network HDP controller performs better than the traditional direct fed voltage and reactive power controllers in virtual inertia control schemes.


Parallel Optimization of Motion Controllers via Policy Iteration

Neural Information Processing Systems

This paper describes a policy iteration algorithm for optimizing the performance of a harmonic function-based controller with respect to a user-defined index. Value functions are represented as potential distributions over the problem domain, being control policies represented as gradient fields over the same domain. All intermediate policies are intrinsically safe, i.e. collisions are not promoted during the adaptation process. The algorithm has efficient implementation in parallel SIMD architectures. One potential application - travel distance minimization - illustrates its usefulness.


Parallel Optimization of Motion Controllers via Policy Iteration

Neural Information Processing Systems

This paper describes a policy iteration algorithm for optimizing the performance of a harmonic function-based controller with respect to a user-defined index. Value functions are represented as potential distributions over the problem domain, being control policies represented as gradient fields over the same domain. All intermediate policies are intrinsically safe, i.e. collisions are not promoted during the adaptation process. The algorithm has efficient implementation in parallel SIMD architectures. One potential application - travel distance minimization - illustrates its usefulness.


Parallel Optimization of Motion Controllers via Policy Iteration

Neural Information Processing Systems

This paper describes a policy iteration algorithm for optimizing the performance of a harmonic function-based controller with respect to a user-defined index. Value functions are represented as potential distributionsover the problem domain, being control policies represented as gradient fields over the same domain. All intermediate policiesare intrinsically safe, i.e. collisions are not promoted during the adaptation process. The algorithm has efficient implementation inparallel SIMD architectures. One potential application - travel distance minimization - illustrates its usefulness.


Real-time autonomous robot navigation using VLSI neural networks

Neural Information Processing Systems

There have been very few demonstrations ofthe application ofVLSI neural networks to real world problems. Yet there are many signal processing, pattern recognition or optimization problems where a large number of competing hypotheses need to be explored in parallel, most often in real time. The massive parallelism of VLSI neural network devices, with one multiplier circuit per synapse, is ideally suited to such problems. In this paper, we present preliminary results from our design for a real time robot navigation system based on VLSI neural network modules.


A VLSI Neural Network for Color Constancy

Neural Information Processing Systems

A system for color correction has been designed, built, and tested successfully; the essential components are three custom chips built using subthreshold analog CMOS VLSI. The system, based on Land's Retinex theory of color constancy, produces colors similar in many respects to those produced by the visual system. Resistive grids implemented in analog VLSI perform the smoothing operation central to the algorithm at video rates. With the electronic system, the strengths and weaknesses of the algorithm are explored.


Real-time autonomous robot navigation using VLSI neural networks

Neural Information Processing Systems

There have been very few demonstrations ofthe application ofVLSI neural networks to real world problems. Yet there are many signal processing, pattern recognition or optimization problems where a large number of competing hypotheses need to be explored in parallel, most often in real time. The massive parallelism of VLSI neural network devices, with one multiplier circuit per synapse, is ideally suited to such problems. In this paper, we present preliminary results from our design for a real time robot navigation system based on VLSI neural network modules.


A VLSI Neural Network for Color Constancy

Neural Information Processing Systems

A system for color correction has been designed, built, and tested successfully; the essential components are three custom chips built using subthreshold analog CMOS VLSI. The system, based on Land's Retinex theory of color constancy, produces colors similar in many respects to those produced by the visual system. Resistive grids implemented in analog VLSI perform the smoothing operation central to the algorithm at video rates. With the electronic system, the strengths and weaknesses of the algorithm are explored.


A VLSI Neural Network for Color Constancy

Neural Information Processing Systems

A system for color correction has been designed, built, and tested successfully; theessential components are three custom chips built using subthreshold analogCMOS VLSI. The system, based on Land's Retinex theory of color constancy, produces colors similar in many respects to those produced by the visual system. Resistive grids implemented in analog VLSI perform the smoothing operation central to the algorithm at video rates. With the electronic system, the strengths and weaknesses of the algorithm are explored.