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Low excitatory innervation balances high intrinsic excitability of immature dentate neurons

Nature Communications

Dieni, Cristina V.; Panichi, Roberto; Aimone, James B.; Kuo, Chay T.; Wadiche, Jacques I.; Overstreet-Wadiche, Linda

Persistent neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus produces immature neurons with high intrinsic excitability and low levels of inhibition that are predicted to be more broadly responsive to afferent activity than mature neurons. Mounting evidence suggests that these immature neurons are necessary for generating distinct neural representations of similar contexts, but it is unclear how broadly responsive neurons help distinguish between similar patterns of afferent activity. Here we show that stimulation of the entorhinal cortex in mouse brain slices paradoxically generates spiking of mature neurons in the absence of immature neuron spiking. Immature neurons with high intrinsic excitability fail to spike due to insufficient excitatory drive that results from low innervation rather than silent synapses or low release probability. Our results suggest that low synaptic connectivity prevents immature neurons from responding broadly to cortical activity, potentially enabling excitable immature neurons to contribute to sparse and orthogonal dentate representations.

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Computational modeling of adult neurogenesis

Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology

Aimone, James B.

The restriction of adult neurogenesis to only a handful of regions of the brain is suggestive of some shared requirement for this dramatic form of structural plasticity. However, a common driver across neurogenic regions has not yet been identified. Computational studies have been invaluable in providing insight into the functional role of new neurons; however, researchers have typically focused on specific scales ranging from abstract neural networks to specific neural systems, most commonly the dentate gyrus area of the hippocampus. These studies have yielded a number of diverse potential functions for new neurons, ranging from an impact on pattern separation to the incorporation of time into episodic memories to enabling the forgetting of old information. This review will summarize these past computational efforts and discuss whether these proposed theoretical functions can be unified into a common rationale for why neurogenesis is required in these unique neural circuits.

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Energy scaling advantages of resistive memory crossbar based computation and its application to sparse coding

Frontiers in Neuroscience

Agarwal, Sapan; Quach, Tu T.; Parekh, Ojas D.; Debenedictis, Erik; James, Conrad D.; Marinella, Matthew; Aimone, James B.

The exponential increase in data over the last decade presents a significant challenge to analytics efforts that seek to process and interpret such data for various applications. Neural-inspired computing approaches are being developed in order to leverage the computational properties of the analog, low-power data processing observed in biological systems. Analog resistive memory crossbars can perform a parallel read or a vector-matrix multiplication as well as a parallel write or a rank-1 update with high computational efficiency. For an N × N crossbar, these two kernels can be O(N) more energy efficient than a conventional digital memory-based architecture. If the read operation is noise limited, the energy to read a column can be independent of the crossbar size (O(1)). These two kernels form the basis of many neuromorphic algorithms such as image, text, and speech recognition. For instance, these kernels can be applied to a neural sparse coding algorithm to give an O(N) reduction in energy for the entire algorithm when run with finite precision. Sparse coding is a rich problem with a host of applications including computer vision, object tracking, and more generally unsupervised learning.

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The energy scaling advantages of RRAM crossbars

2015 4th Berkeley Symposium on Energy Efficient Electronic Systems E3s 2015 Proceedings

Agarwal, Sapan; Parekh, Ojas D.; Quach, Tu T.; James, Conrad D.; Aimone, James B.; Marinella, Matthew

As transistors start to approach fundamental limits and Moore's law slows down, new devices and architectures are needed to enable continued performance gains. New approaches based on RRAM (resistive random access memory) or memristor crossbars can enable the processing of large amounts of data[1, 2]. One of the most promising applications for RRAM crossbars is brain inspired or neuromorphic computing[3, 4].

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The energy scaling advantages of RRAM crossbars

2015 4th Berkeley Symposium on Energy Efficient Electronic Systems, E3S 2015 - Proceedings

Agarwal, Sapan; Parekh, Ojas D.; Quach, Tu T.; James, Conrad D.; Aimone, James B.; Marinella, Matthew

As transistors start to approach fundamental limits and Moore's law slows down, new devices and architectures are needed to enable continued performance gains. New approaches based on RRAM (resistive random access memory) or memristor crossbars can enable the processing of large amounts of data[1, 2]. One of the most promising applications for RRAM crossbars is brain inspired or neuromorphic computing[3, 4].

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Results 151–175 of 218
Results 151–175 of 218