4.6 Article

Memristor Circuits for Simulating Neuron Spiking and Burst Phenomena

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.681035

Keywords

neuron; spiking; bursting; memristor; pulse-programmed circuit; harmonic balance

Categories

Funding

  1. project Analogue COmputing with Dynamic Switching Memristor Oscillators: Theory, Devices and Applications (COSMO) - Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR) [PRIN 2017LSCR4K 002]

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This paper demonstrates that memristor circuits can be used to mimic some features of neuron dynamics in response to external stimuli, by exploiting the multistability of memristor circuits and using pulse-programmed inputs. The study shows that memristor charge behavior can approximate simplified models of neuron response, achieved by switching between equilibrium points and limit cycles via properly designed pulse timings of the current source. The design procedure takes into account the relationships between pulse features and circuit parameters derived from the analytic approximation of limit cycles obtained via the Describing Function method.
Since the introduction of memristors, it has been widely recognized that they can be successfully employed as synapses in neuromorphic circuits. This paper focuses on showing that memristor circuits can be also used for mimicking some features of the dynamics exhibited by neurons in response to an external stimulus. The proposed approach relies on exploiting multistability of memristor circuits, i.e., the coexistence of infinitely many attractors, and employing a suitable pulse-programmed input for switching among the different attractors. Specifically, it is first shown that a circuit composed of a resistor, an inductor, a capacitor and an ideal charge-controlled memristor displays infinitely many stable equilibrium points and limit cycles, each one pertaining to a planar invariant manifold. Moreover, each limit cycle is approximated via a first-order periodic approximation analytically obtained via the Describing Function (DF) method, a well-known technique in the Harmonic Balance (HB) context. Then, it is shown that the memristor charge is capable to mimic some simplified models of the neuron response when an external independent pulse-programmed current source is introduced in the circuit. The memristor charge behavior is generated via the concatenation of convergent and oscillatory behaviors which are obtained by switching between equilibrium points and limit cycles via a properly designed pulse timing of the current source. The design procedure takes also into account some relationships between the pulse features and the circuit parameters which are derived exploiting the analytic approximation of the limit cycles obtained via the DF method.

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