CBGT-Net: A Neuromimetic Architecture for Robust Classification of Streaming Data - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

CBGT-Net: A Neuromimetic Architecture for Robust Classification of Streaming Data

Master's Thesis, Tech. Report, CMU-RI-TR-24-29, June, 2024

Abstract

This research introduces CBGT-Net, a neural network model inspired by the cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic (CBGT) circuits in mammalian brains, which are crucial for critical thinking and decision-making. Unlike traditional neural network models that generate an output for each input or after a fixed sequence of inputs, CBGT-Net learns to produce an output once sufficient evidence for action is accumulated from a stream of observed data. For each observation, CBGT-Net generates a vector representing the amount of evidence for each potential decision, accumulates this evidence over time, and makes a decision when the accumulated evidence surpasses a predefined or dynamically learned threshold.

We evaluate the proposed model on various image classification tasks, where models must predict image categories based on a stream of partially informative visual inputs. Our results demonstrate that CBGT-Net offers improved accuracy and robustness compared to models trained to classify from a single image, as well as models utilizing an LSTM layer or a ViT-style transformer to classify from a fixed sequence of image inputs. Additionally, we introduce a novel dataset for classification based on sequential image data of urban city buildings. This dataset provides multi-view images of 3D building assets on fire, categorized into five stages of fire severity.

BibTeX

@mastersthesis{Sharma-2024-141266,
author = {Shreya Sharma},
title = {CBGT-Net: A Neuromimetic Architecture for Robust Classification of Streaming Data},
year = {2024},
month = {June},
school = {Carnegie Mellon University},
address = {Pittsburgh, PA},
number = {CMU-RI-TR-24-29},
keywords = {Neuro-inspired, Machine Learning, CBGT, Decision-making, Image classification, Evidence accumulation, Cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic circuits, Sequential image data},
}