IEEE Access (Jan 2020)

An Amygdala-Inspired Classical Conditioning Model Implemented on an FPGA for Home Service Robots

  • Yuichiro Tanaka,
  • Takashi Morie,
  • Hakaru Tamukoh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3038161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 212066 – 212078

Abstract

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This study develops an intelligent system for home service robots mimicking human brain function that can manage common knowledge applicable to any environment and local knowledge reflecting its specific environment. Deep learning is effective for acquiring common knowledge because the performance of deep learning relies on the amounts of training and big training data that can be accessed for such knowledge; however, deep learning is ineffective for acquiring local knowledge because no big training data for such knowledge exist. Thus, we propose a brain-inspired learning model and system for acquiring local knowledge using small training data. We focus on the amygdala because its classical fear conditioning is effective for training using small training data. We propose an amygdala-inspired classical conditioning model comprising multiple self-organizing maps (lateral nucleus) and a fully connected neural network (central nucleus), imitating the function and structure of the amygdala. The proposed model is applied to a task of a waiter robot in a restaurant, and the model can learn customers' preferences after only a few human-robot interactions. We accelerate the computation of the model and reduce its power consumption by proposing a hardware-oriented algorithm for the model and its digital hardware design and implement it in an XCZU9EG field programmable gate array. The hardware-oriented algorithm reduces the multiplication operations and exponential functions requiring huge hardware resources. The performance of the hardware operated at 150 MHz is 1,273 times faster than the software implementation on Arm Cortex-A53, and the power consumption of the chip is 5.009 W.

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