Ronny Ronen

2papers

2 Papers

4.1NEApr 23Code
On the Role of Preprocessing and Memristor Dynamics in Reservoir Computing for Image Classification

Rishona Daniels, Duna Wattad, Ronny Ronen et al.

Reservoir computing (RC) is an emerging recurrent neural network architecture that has attracted growing attention for its low training cost and modest hardware requirements. Memristor-based circuits are particularly promising for RC, as their intrinsic dynamics can reduce network size and parameter overhead in tasks such as time-series prediction and image recognition. Although RC has been demonstrated with several memristive devices, a comprehensive evaluation of device-level requirements remains limited. In this paper, we analyze and explain the operation of a parallel delayed feedback network (PDFN) RC architecture with volatile memristors, focusing on how device characteristics -- such as decay rate, quantization, and variability -- affect reservoir performance. We further discuss strategies to improve data representation in the reservoir using preprocessing methods and suggest potential improvements. The proposed approach achieves 95.89% classification accuracy on MNIST, comparable with the best reported memristor-based RC implementations. Furthermore, the method maintains high robustness under 20% device variability, achieving an accuracy of up to 94.2%. These results demonstrate that volatile memristors can support reliable spatio-temporal information processing and reinforce their potential as key building blocks for compact, high-speed, and energy-efficient neuromorphic computing systems.

LGMay 10, 2017
Why & When Deep Learning Works: Looking Inside Deep Learnings

Ronny Ronen

The Intel Collaborative Research Institute for Computational Intelligence (ICRI-CI) has been heavily supporting Machine Learning and Deep Learning research from its foundation in 2012. We have asked six leading ICRI-CI Deep Learning researchers to address the challenge of "Why & When Deep Learning works", with the goal of looking inside Deep Learning, providing insights on how deep networks function, and uncovering key observations on their expressiveness, limitations, and potential. The output of this challenge resulted in five papers that address different facets of deep learning. These different facets include a high-level understating of why and when deep networks work (and do not work), the impact of geometry on the expressiveness of deep networks, and making deep networks interpretable.