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Poster C90 in Poster Session C - Friday, August 9, 2024, 11:15 am – 1:15 pm, Johnson Ice Rink

Adapting to time: why nature chose to evolve a diverse set of neurons

Karim Habashy1 (), Benjamin Evans2, Dan Goodman3, Jeffrey Bowers1; 1University of Bristol, 2University of Sussex, 3Imperial College London

Neurons are morphologically diverse, but the evolutionary advantage of this is unclear. In addition, neurons spike and exploit time in their computations, outputs and learning. However, most work on artificial neural networks (ANNs) abstract over these details and restrict learning and adaptation to the spatial parameters of weights and biases. Even when time is introduced in ANNs, it is introduced through recurrency at a fixed time step (synchronous computation), and again, learning is restricted to weights and biases. Here we adapt weights, time constants and delays in an evolutionary context in an attempt to gain some insights into why neurons are so diverse. We show that nature might have evolved a morphologically diverse set of neurons to i) map spatio-temporal spike trains and ii) ease the evolutionary search for high performing solutions.

Keywords: Neuro-morphology Evolutionary algorithms Spiking networks Time constants and delays 

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