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ECAL
2003
Springer

Pattern Recognition in a Bucket

14 years 5 months ago
Pattern Recognition in a Bucket
This paper demonstrates that the waves produced on the surface of water can be used as the medium for a “Liquid State Machine” that pre-processes inputs so allowing a simple perceptron to solve the XOR problem and undertake speech recognition. Interference between waves allows non-linear parallel computation upon simultaneous sensory inputs. Temporal patterns of stimulation are converted to spatial patterns of water waves upon which a linear discrimination can be made. Whereas Wolfgang Maass’ Liquid State Machine requires fine tuning of the spiking neural network parameters, water has inherent self-organising properties such as strong local interactions, time-dependent spread of activation to distant areas, inherent stability to a wide variety of inputs, and high complexity. Water achieves this “for free”, and does so without the time-consuming computation required by realistic neural models. An analogy is made between water molecules and neurons in a recurrent neural networ...
Chrisantha Fernando, Sampsa Sojakka
Added 06 Jul 2010
Updated 06 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where ECAL
Authors Chrisantha Fernando, Sampsa Sojakka
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