Self-Organizing Neural Networks for Supervised and Unsupervised Learning and Prediction

Author(s):  
Gail A. Carpenter ◽  
Stephen Grossberg
Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 938 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrique Miranda ◽  
Jordi Suñé

Artificial Intelligence has found many applications in the last decade due to increased computing power. Artificial Neural Networks are inspired in the brain structure and consist in the interconnection of artificial neurons through artificial synapses in the so-called Deep Neural Networks (DNNs). Training these systems requires huge amounts of data and, after the network is trained, it can recognize unforeseen data and provide useful information. As far as the training is concerned, we can distinguish between supervised and unsupervised learning. The former requires labelled data and is based on the iterative minimization of the output error using the stochastic gradient descent method followed by the recalculation of the strength of the synaptic connections (weights) with the backpropagation algorithm. On the other hand, unsupervised learning does not require data labeling and it is not based on explicit output error minimization. Conventional ANNs can function with supervised learning algorithms (perceptrons, multi-layer perceptrons, convolutional networks, etc.) but also with unsupervised learning rules (Kohonen networks, self-organizing maps, etc.). Besides, another type of neural networks are the so-called Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) in which learning takes place through the superposition of voltage spikes launched by the neurons. Their behavior is much closer to the brain functioning mechanisms they can be used with supervised and unsupervised learning rules. Since learning and inference is based on short voltage spikes, energy efficiency improves substantially. Up to this moment, all these ANNs (spiking and conventional) have been implemented as software tools running on conventional computing units based on the von Neumann architecture. However, this approach reaches important limits due to the required computing power, physical size and energy consumption. This is particularly true for applications at the edge of the internet. Thus, there is an increasing interest in developing AI tools directly implemented in hardware for this type of applications. The first hardware demonstrations have been based on Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) circuits and specific communication protocols. However, to further increase training speed andenergy efficiency while reducing the system size, the combination of CMOS neuron circuits with memristor synapses is now being explored. It has also been pointed out that the short time non-volatility of some memristors may even allow fabricating purely memristive ANNs. The memristor is a new device (first demonstrated in solid-state in 2008) which behaves as a resistor with memory and which has been shown to have potentiation and depression properties similar to those of biological synapses. In this Special Issue, we explore the state of the art of neuromorphic circuits implementing neural networks with memristors for AI applications.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 9746-9750

Searching for an optimal article which was given highest and best priority is quite harder based on requirements. Ranking is one of the best measure or a method to get the best rated and optimal article or a conference or a research paper through this huge Internet World. As Technology been increasing day by day Artificial Intelligence is the first step to get through any problem for a solution Machine learning is also an important aspect of Artificial Intelligence. Machine Learning is best known for classifying, categorizing and predicting. Rank prediction can be done through many different algorithm implementations in machine learning. But choosing the best is important for accurate results. This paper gives the most accurate results of algorithms that can be used for rank predictions for articles. To simplify and resolve this problem, solutions were given in many different ways but to achieve accuracy is necessary, in previous models this is given using supervised learning only. We proposed this research work with perfect results using both supervised and unsupervised learning. Neural Networks is the best algorithm in supervised learning for classifying and predicting within data. In unsupervised learning we used K-means clustering because of grouping the data. This work helps the user(s) for optimal search of an article and also gives a competitive spirit for author to get into the top, totally this is implemented using Machine Learning Techniques of Neural Networks, K-Means Algorithm which is a mixture of supervised and unsupervised learning for predicting ranks.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (15) ◽  
pp. eabe4166
Author(s):  
Philippe Schwaller ◽  
Benjamin Hoover ◽  
Jean-Louis Reymond ◽  
Hendrik Strobelt ◽  
Teodoro Laino

Humans use different domain languages to represent, explore, and communicate scientific concepts. During the last few hundred years, chemists compiled the language of chemical synthesis inferring a series of “reaction rules” from knowing how atoms rearrange during a chemical transformation, a process called atom-mapping. Atom-mapping is a laborious experimental task and, when tackled with computational methods, requires continuous annotation of chemical reactions and the extension of logically consistent directives. Here, we demonstrate that Transformer Neural Networks learn atom-mapping information between products and reactants without supervision or human labeling. Using the Transformer attention weights, we build a chemically agnostic, attention-guided reaction mapper and extract coherent chemical grammar from unannotated sets of reactions. Our method shows remarkable performance in terms of accuracy and speed, even for strongly imbalanced and chemically complex reactions with nontrivial atom-mapping. It provides the missing link between data-driven and rule-based approaches for numerous chemical reaction tasks.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document