2018-05-172018-05-172005Paz Vicente, R., Linares Barranco, A., Cascado Caballero, D., Vicente Díaz, S., Jiménez Moreno, G. y Civit Balcells, A. (2005). Time-Recovering PCI-AER interface for Bio-inspired Spiking Systems. En SPIE Microtechnologies for the New Millennium 2005 (111-118), Sevilla, España: SPIE: The International Society for Optics and Photonics.0277-786Xhttps://hdl.handle.net/11441/74721Address Event Representation (AER) is an emergent neuromorphic interchip communication protocol that allows for real-time virtual massive connectivity between huge number neurons located on different chips. By exploiting high speed digital communication circuits (with nano-seconds timings), synaptic neural connections can be time multiplexed, while neural activity signals (with mili-seconds timings) are sampled at low frequencies. Also, neurons generate ‘events’ according to their activity levels. More active neurons generate more events per unit time, and access the interchip communication channel more frequently, while neurons with low activity consume less communication bandwidth. When building multi-chip muti-layered AER systems it is absolutely necessary to have a computer interface that allows (a) to read AER interchip traffic into the computer and visualize it on screen, and (b) inject a sequence of events at some point of the AER structure. This is necessary for testing and debugging complex AER systems. This paper presents a PCI to AER interface, that dispatches a sequence of events received from the PCI bus with embedded timing information to establish when each event will be delivered. A set of specialized states machines has been introduced to recovery the possible time delays introduced by the asynchronous AER bus. On the input channel, the interface capture events assigning a timestamp and delivers them through the PCI bus to MATLAB applications. It has been implemented in real time hardware using VHDL and it has been tested in a PCI-AER board, developed by authors, that includes a Spartan II 200 FPGA. The demonstration hardware is currently capable to send and receive events at a peak rate of 8,3 Mev/sec, and a typical rate of 1 Mev/sec.application/pdfengAtribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Estados Unidos de Américahttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Time-Recovering PCI-AER interface for Bio-inspired Spiking Systemsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjectinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess10.1117/12.6082556535448