Dear 1240288839,
you can regard the calculation of the weights A-C and B-C as being
completely independent.
The article
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00422-008-0233-1
explains how this works in a broad class of STDP models.
Regards,
Markus
On 10/26/20 2:55 PM, 1240288839(a)qq.com wrote:
I am sorry for my late reply and thanks for your
answer. But I get another question about. What do you mean, that the spike may arrive
earlier at one synapse than at another, although the first one has a greater delay? I will
give a example to show my question clearly.
Here is a situation I am involved. Supposed there are two neurons named A and B, and
they are connected to neuron C using stdp_synapse. During one simulation, A and B may both
activate many times. Also, I suppose that A send two spikes named t1 and t2, and B send
three spikes t3,t4 and t5, so my question is how you calculate the A-C weight or B-C
weight according to STDP rule.? As you said, if there is a synapse, I can easily
understand how the stdp_synapse work or calculate, but when there are synapses, I am
confused.
Thanks for your answer again! And if I didn't make my question clearly I can explain
more clearly.
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