KLR Hopfield networks store up to 16-20 times their neuron count before dynamical instability from crosstalk noise causes collapse, with sharp attractor boundaries observed via morphing and SNR analysis.
Efficient event-driven retrieval in high-capacity kernel Hopfield networks
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abstract
High-capacity associative memory models, such as Kernel Logistic Regression (KLR) Hopfield networks, have demonstrated strong storage capabilities but typically rely on computationally expensive synchronous updates. This reliance poses a bottleneck for deployment on energy-efficient, event-driven neuromorphic hardware. In this paper, we investigate the asynchronous retrieval dynamics of KLR Hopfield networks. We show empirically that, under appropriately tuned kernel parameters, asynchronous sequential updates exhibit trajectories that are statistically indistinguishable from those of synchronous dynamics, while maintaining high recall accuracy within the tested regime for random patterns. Furthermore, we find that the asynchronous network achieves empirical storage capacities approaching $P/N \approx 30$ in static random pattern regimes, exceeding classical limits. To evaluate computational efficiency, we analyze the total number of state transitions (bit flips) required for error correction. The results show that the network converges using a number of events close to the initial Hamming distance from the target pattern, without observable spurious oscillations. These findings suggest that the large-margin attractors induced by KLR learning create a smooth energy landscape suited for sparse, event-driven computation, providing a basis for scalable and low-power associative memory on neuromorphic architectures.
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Geometric and dynamical analysis of attractor boundaries and storage limits in kernel Hopfield networks
KLR Hopfield networks store up to 16-20 times their neuron count before dynamical instability from crosstalk noise causes collapse, with sharp attractor boundaries observed via morphing and SNR analysis.