Self-organizing maps
Self-organizing maps (SOMs) have been proposed by Willshaw and Von Der Malsburg (in Willshaw D. J., Von Der Malsburg C., How patterned neural connections can be set up by self-organization, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B/194, N. 1117, 1976) to model different neurobiological phenomena observed in animals. In particular, they discovered that some areas of the brain develop structures with different areas, each of them with a high sensitivity for a specific input pattern. The process behind such a behavior is quite different from what we have discussed up until now, because it's based on competition among neural units based on a principle called winner-takes-all. During the training period, all the units are excited with the same signal, but only one will produce the highest response. This unit is automatically candidate to become the receptive basin for that specific pattern. The particular model we are going to present has been introduced by...