Shuncheng Jia

NE
h-index9
9papers
113citations
Novelty45%
AI Score37

9 Papers

NEMar 12, 2022
Recent Advances and New Frontiers in Spiking Neural Networks

Duzhen Zhang, Shuncheng Jia, Qingyu Wang

In recent years, spiking neural networks (SNNs) have received extensive attention in brain-inspired intelligence due to their rich spatially-temporal dynamics, various encoding methods, and event-driven characteristics that naturally fit the neuromorphic hardware. With the development of SNNs, brain-inspired intelligence, an emerging research field inspired by brain science achievements and aiming at artificial general intelligence, is becoming hot. This paper reviews recent advances and discusses new frontiers in SNNs from five major research topics, including essential elements (i.e., spiking neuron models, encoding methods, and topology structures), neuromorphic datasets, optimization algorithms, software, and hardware frameworks. We hope our survey can help researchers understand SNNs better and inspire new works to advance this field.

NEDec 29, 2022
Tuning Synaptic Connections instead of Weights by Genetic Algorithm in Spiking Policy Network

Duzhen Zhang, Tielin Zhang, Shuncheng Jia et al.

Learning from interaction is the primary way that biological agents acquire knowledge about their environment and themselves. Modern deep reinforcement learning (DRL) explores a computational approach to learning from interaction and has made significant progress in solving various tasks. However, despite its power, DRL still falls short of biological agents in terms of energy efficiency. Although the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood, we believe that the integration of spiking communication between neurons and biologically-plausible synaptic plasticity plays a prominent role in achieving greater energy efficiency. Following this biological intuition, we optimized a spiking policy network (SPN) using a genetic algorithm as an energy-efficient alternative to DRL. Our SPN mimics the sensorimotor neuron pathway of insects and communicates through event-based spikes. Inspired by biological research showing that the brain forms memories by creating new synaptic connections and rewiring these connections based on new experiences, we tuned the synaptic connections instead of weights in the SPN to solve given tasks. Experimental results on several robotic control tasks demonstrate that our method can achieve the same level of performance as mainstream DRL methods while exhibiting significantly higher energy efficiency.

NENov 12, 2022
Motif-topology improved Spiking Neural Network for the Cocktail Party Effect and McGurk Effect

Shuncheng Jia, Tielin Zhang, Ruichen Zuo et al.

Network architectures and learning principles are playing key in forming complex functions in artificial neural networks (ANNs) and spiking neural networks (SNNs). SNNs are considered the new-generation artificial networks by incorporating more biological features than ANNs, including dynamic spiking neurons, functionally specified architectures, and efficient learning paradigms. Network architectures are also considered embodying the function of the network. Here, we propose a Motif-topology improved SNN (M-SNN) for the efficient multi-sensory integration and cognitive phenomenon simulations. The cognitive phenomenon simulation we simulated includes the cocktail party effect and McGurk effect, which are discussed by many researchers. Our M-SNN constituted by the meta operator called network motifs. The source of 3-node network motifs topology from artificial one pre-learned from the spatial or temporal dataset. In the single-sensory classification task, the results showed the accuracy of M-SNN using network motif topologies was higher than the pure feedforward network topology without using them. In the multi-sensory integration task, the performance of M-SNN using artificial network motif was better than the state-of-the-art SNN using BRP (biologically-plausible reward propagation). Furthermore, the M-SNN could better simulate the cocktail party effect and McGurk effect with lower computational cost. We think the artificial network motifs could be considered as some prior knowledge that would contribute to the multi-sensory integration of SNNs and provide more benefits for simulating the cognitive phenomenon.

CLAug 17, 2025
MedKGent: A Large Language Model Agent Framework for Constructing Temporally Evolving Medical Knowledge Graph

Duzhen Zhang, Zixiao Wang, Zhong-Zhi Li et al.

The rapid expansion of medical literature presents growing challenges for structuring and integrating domain knowledge at scale. Knowledge Graphs (KGs) offer a promising solution by enabling efficient retrieval, automated reasoning, and knowledge discovery. However, current KG construction methods often rely on supervised pipelines with limited generalizability or naively aggregate outputs from Large Language Models (LLMs), treating biomedical corpora as static and ignoring the temporal dynamics and contextual uncertainty of evolving knowledge. To address these limitations, we introduce MedKGent, a LLM agent framework for constructing temporally evolving medical KGs. Leveraging over 10 million PubMed abstracts published between 1975 and 2023, we simulate the emergence of biomedical knowledge via a fine-grained daily time series. MedKGent incrementally builds the KG in a day-by-day manner using two specialized agents powered by the Qwen2.5-32B-Instruct model. The Extractor Agent identifies knowledge triples and assigns confidence scores via sampling-based estimation, which are used to filter low-confidence extractions and inform downstream processing. The Constructor Agent incrementally integrates the retained triples into a temporally evolving graph, guided by confidence scores and timestamps to reinforce recurring knowledge and resolve conflicts. The resulting KG contains 156,275 entities and 2,971,384 relational triples. Quality assessments by two SOTA LLMs and three domain experts demonstrate an accuracy approaching 90%, with strong inter-rater agreement. To evaluate downstream utility, we conduct RAG across seven medical question answering benchmarks using five leading LLMs, consistently observing significant improvements over non-augmented baselines. Case studies further demonstrate the KG's value in literature-based drug repurposing via confidence-aware causal inference.

CVAug 6, 2025
Revisiting Continual Semantic Segmentation with Pre-trained Vision Models

Duzhen Zhang, Yong Ren, Wei Cong et al.

Continual Semantic Segmentation (CSS) seeks to incrementally learn to segment novel classes while preserving knowledge of previously encountered ones. Recent advancements in CSS have been largely driven by the adoption of Pre-trained Vision Models (PVMs) as backbones. Among existing strategies, Direct Fine-Tuning (DFT), which sequentially fine-tunes the model across classes, remains the most straightforward approach. Prior work often regards DFT as a performance lower bound due to its presumed vulnerability to severe catastrophic forgetting, leading to the development of numerous complex mitigation techniques. However, we contend that this prevailing assumption is flawed. In this paper, we systematically revisit forgetting in DFT across two standard benchmarks, Pascal VOC 2012 and ADE20K, under eight CSS settings using two representative PVM backbones: ResNet101 and Swin-B. Through a detailed probing analysis, our findings reveal that existing methods significantly underestimate the inherent anti-forgetting capabilities of PVMs. Even under DFT, PVMs retain previously learned knowledge with minimal forgetting. Further investigation of the feature space indicates that the observed forgetting primarily arises from the classifier's drift away from the PVM, rather than from degradation of the backbone representations. Based on this insight, we propose DFT*, a simple yet effective enhancement to DFT that incorporates strategies such as freezing the PVM backbone and previously learned classifiers, as well as pre-allocating future classifiers. Extensive experiments show that DFT* consistently achieves competitive or superior performance compared to sixteen state-of-the-art CSS methods, while requiring substantially fewer trainable parameters and less training time.

NEFeb 11, 2022
Motif-topology and Reward-learning improved Spiking Neural Network for Efficient Multi-sensory Integration

Shuncheng Jia, Ruichen Zuo, Tielin Zhang et al.

Network architectures and learning principles are key in forming complex functions in artificial neural networks (ANNs) and spiking neural networks (SNNs). SNNs are considered the new-generation artificial networks by incorporating more biological features than ANNs, including dynamic spiking neurons, functionally specified architectures, and efficient learning paradigms. In this paper, we propose a Motif-topology and Reward-learning improved SNN (MR-SNN) for efficient multi-sensory integration. MR-SNN contains 13 types of 3-node Motif topologies which are first extracted from independent single-sensory learning paradigms and then integrated for multi-sensory classification. The experimental results showed higher accuracy and stronger robustness of the proposed MR-SNN than other conventional SNNs without using Motifs. Furthermore, the proposed reward learning paradigm was biologically plausible and can better explain the cognitive McGurk effect caused by incongruent visual and auditory sensory signals.

AIJun 15, 2021
Population-coding and Dynamic-neurons improved Spiking Actor Network for Reinforcement Learning

Duzhen Zhang, Tielin Zhang, Shuncheng Jia et al.

With the Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) as a powerful function approximator, Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) has been excellently demonstrated on robotic control tasks. Compared to DNNs with vanilla artificial neurons, the biologically plausible Spiking Neural Network (SNN) contains a diverse population of spiking neurons, making it naturally powerful on state representation with spatial and temporal information. Based on a hybrid learning framework, where a spike actor-network infers actions from states and a deep critic network evaluates the actor, we propose a Population-coding and Dynamic-neurons improved Spiking Actor Network (PDSAN) for efficient state representation from two different scales: input coding and neuronal coding. For input coding, we apply population coding with dynamically receptive fields to directly encode each input state component. For neuronal coding, we propose different types of dynamic-neurons (containing 1st-order and 2nd-order neuronal dynamics) to describe much more complex neuronal dynamics. Finally, the PDSAN is trained in conjunction with deep critic networks using the Twin Delayed Deep Deterministic policy gradient algorithm (TD3-PDSAN). Extensive experimental results show that our TD3-PDSAN model achieves better performance than state-of-the-art models on four OpenAI gym benchmark tasks. It is an important attempt to improve RL with SNN towards the effective computation satisfying biological plausibility.

NEOct 9, 2020
Tuning Convolutional Spiking Neural Network with Biologically-plausible Reward Propagation

Tielin Zhang, Shuncheng Jia, Xiang Cheng et al.

Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) contain more biologically realistic structures and biologically-inspired learning principles than those in standard Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs). SNNs are considered the third generation of ANNs, powerful on the robust computation with a low computational cost. The neurons in SNNs are non-differential, containing decayed historical states and generating event-based spikes after their states reaching the firing threshold. These dynamic characteristics of SNNs make it difficult to be directly trained with the standard backpropagation (BP), which is also considered not biologically plausible. In this paper, a Biologically-plausible Reward Propagation (BRP) algorithm is proposed and applied to the SNN architecture with both spiking-convolution (with both 1D and 2D convolutional kernels) and full-connection layers. Unlike the standard BP that propagates error signals from post to presynaptic neurons layer by layer, the BRP propagates target labels instead of errors directly from the output layer to all pre-hidden layers. This effort is more consistent with the top-down reward-guiding learning in cortical columns of the neocortex. Synaptic modifications with only local gradient differences are induced with pseudo-BP that might also be replaced with the Spike-Timing Dependent Plasticity (STDP). The performance of the proposed BRP-SNN is further verified on the spatial (including MNIST and Cifar-10) and temporal (including TIDigits and DvsGesture) tasks, where the SNN using BRP has reached a similar accuracy compared to other state-of-the-art BP-based SNNs and saved 50% more computational cost than ANNs. We think the introduction of biologically plausible learning rules to the training procedure of biologically realistic SNNs will give us more hints and inspirations toward a better understanding of the biological system's intelligent nature.

NEOct 7, 2020
Finite Meta-Dynamic Neurons in Spiking Neural Networks for Spatio-temporal Learning

Xiang Cheng, Tielin Zhang, Shuncheng Jia et al.

Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) have incorporated more biologically-plausible structures and learning principles, hence are playing critical roles in bridging the gap between artificial and natural neural networks. The spikes are the sparse signals describing the above-threshold event-based firing and under-threshold dynamic computation of membrane potentials, which give us an alternative uniformed and efficient way on both information representation and computation. Inspired from the biological network, where a finite number of meta neurons integrated together for various of cognitive functions, we proposed and constructed Meta-Dynamic Neurons (MDN) to improve SNNs for a better network generalization during spatio-temporal learning. The MDNs are designed with basic neuronal dynamics containing 1st-order and 2nd-order dynamics of membrane potentials, including the spatial and temporal meta types supported by some hyper-parameters. The MDNs generated from a spatial (MNIST) and a temporal (TIDigits) datasets first, and then extended to various other different spatio-temporal tasks (including Fashion-MNIST, NETtalk, Cifar-10, TIMIT and N-MNIST). The comparable accuracy was reached compared to other SOTA SNN algorithms, and a better generalization was also achieved by SNNs using MDNs than that without using MDNs.