A Neuromodulable Current-Mode Silicon Neuron for Robust and Adaptive Neuromorphic Systems
Loris Mendolia, Chenxi Wen, Elisabetta Chicca, Giacomo Indiveri, Rodolphe Sepulchre, Jean-Michel Redout\'e, Alessio Franci

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel current-mode silicon neuron that enables robust, adaptive neuromodulation in neuromorphic systems, demonstrated through theoretical analysis and experimental CMOS implementation.
Contribution
A new low-complexity, neuromodulable silicon neuron design supporting robust adaptation, compatible with standard CMOS technology, and validated through theoretical and experimental methods.
Findings
The neuron supports biologically plausible neuromodulation over a wide parameter range.
Experimental CMOS implementation confirms the theoretical predictions.
The design exhibits high robustness, flexibility, and scalability across operating conditions.
Abstract
Neuromorphic engineering makes use of mixed-signal analog and digital circuits to directly emulate the computational principles of biological brains. Such electronic systems offer a high degree of adaptability, robustness, and energy efficiency across a wide range of tasks, from edge computing to robotics. Within this context, we investigate a key feature of biological neurons: their ability to carry out robust and reliable computation by adapting their input responses and spiking patterns to context through neuromodulation. Achieving analogous levels of robustness and adaptation in neuromorphic circuits through modulatory mechanisms is a largely unexplored path. We present a novel current-mode neuron design that supports robust neuromodulation with minimal model complexity, compatible with standard CMOS technologies. We first introduce a mathematical model of the circuit and provide…
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