4.6 Article

Embedded Real-Time Implementation of Bio-Inspired Central Pattern Generator with Self-Repairing Function

Journal

ELECTRONICS
Volume 11, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/electronics11132089

Keywords

astrocyte; robustness; self-repairing; Central Pattern Generator (CPG); Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62171312, 61771330]
  2. Tianjin Municipal Natural Science Foundation [19JCQNJC01200]

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This paper proposes a novel bio-inspired self-repairing CPG model based on tripartite synapse, and demonstrates its robustness and self-repairing capabilities through experiments in the presence of synaptic failures.
Both robustness and self-repairing of the rhythmic behaviors generated by central pattern generators (CPGs) play significant roles in locomotion control. Although current CPG models have been established to mimic rhythmic outputs, the mechanisms by which the self-repairing capacities of CPG systems are formed are largely unknown. In this paper, a novel bio-inspired self-repairing CPG model (BiSRP-CPG) is proposed based on the tripartite synapse, which reveals the critical role of astrocytes in the dynamic coordination of CPGs. BiSRP-CPG is implemented on the parallel FPGA platform to simulate CPG systems on real physiological scale, in which a hardware implementation method without multiplier is utilized to break the limitation of FPGA hardware resources. The experimental results verified both the robustness and self-repairing capabilities of rhythm of BiSRP-CPG in the presence of stochastic synaptic inputs and faulty synapse. Under the synaptic failure rate of 20%, BiSRP-CPG suffered only 10.53% performance degradation, which was much lower than the 36.84% spike loss rate of CPG networks without astrocytes. This paper provides an insight into one of the possible self-repair mechanisms of brain rhythms which can be utilized to develop autonomously fault-tolerant electronic systems.

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