Advancing the Biological Plausibility and Efficacy of Hebbian Convolutional Neural Networks
This work addresses the problem of biologically implausible and computationally intensive learning in neural networks for AI researchers, though it is incremental in advancing existing Hebbian-CNN integrations.
The paper tackled the integration of Hebbian learning into CNNs for image processing, achieving an optimal model that matched backpropagation on CIFAR-10 with 75.2% accuracy and surpassed prior hard-WTA CNNs by 10.6%.
The research presented in this paper advances the integration of Hebbian learning into Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) for image processing, systematically exploring different architectures to build an optimal configuration, adhering to biological tenability. Hebbian learning operates on local unsupervised neural information to form feature representations, providing an alternative to the popular but arguably biologically implausible and computationally intensive backpropagation learning algorithm. The suggested optimal architecture significantly enhances recent research aimed at integrating Hebbian learning with competition mechanisms and CNNs, expanding their representational capabilities by incorporating hard Winner-Takes-All (WTA) competition, Gaussian lateral inhibition mechanisms, and Bienenstock-Cooper-Munro (BCM) learning rule in a single model. Mean accuracy classification measures during the last half of test epochs on CIFAR-10 revealed that the resulting optimal model matched its end-to-end backpropagation variant with 75.2% each, critically surpassing the state-of-the-art hard-WTA performance in CNNs of the same network depth (64.6%) by 10.6%. It also achieved competitive performance on MNIST (98%) and STL-10 (69.5%). Moreover, results showed clear indications of sparse hierarchical learning through increasingly complex and abstract receptive fields. In summary, our implementation enhances both the performance and the generalisability of the learnt representations and constitutes a crucial step towards more biologically realistic artificial neural networks.