LEARNING BY SELECTION IN THE TRION MODEL OF CORTICAL ORGANIZATION

被引:21
作者
SHENOY, KV [1 ]
KAUFMAN, J [1 ]
MCGRANN, JV [1 ]
SHAW, GL [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF IRVINE,CTR NEUROBIOL LEARNING & MEMORY,DEPT PHYS,IRVINE,CA 92717
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1093/cercor/3.3.239
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The basic issue of whether mammalian learning in cortex proceeds via a selection principle, as stressed by Edelman, versus an instructional one is of major importance. We present here a realization of selection learning in the trion model, which is based on the Mountcastle columnar organizational principle of cortex. We suggest that mammalian cortex starts out with an a priori connectivity between minicolumns that is highly structured in time and in space, competing between excitation and *inhibition. This provides a ''naive'' repertoire of spatial-temporal firing patterns that stimuli and internal processing map onto. These patterns can be learned with small modifications to the connectivity strengths determined by a Hebbian learning rule. As various patterns are learned, the repertoire changes somewhat in order to respond properly to various stimuli, but the majority of all possible stimuli still map onto spatial-temporal firing patterns of the original repertoire. In order to show that the example presented here is showing true selectivity and is not an artifact of more stimuli evolving into the learned pattern, we develop a selectivity measure. We suggest that some form of instructional learning (in which connectivities are finely tuned) is present for difficult tasks requiring many trials, whereas very rapid learning involves selectional learning. Both types of learning must be considered to understand behavior.
引用
收藏
页码:239 / 248
页数:10
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   ISO-ORIENTATION DOMAINS IN CAT VISUAL-CORTEX ARE ARRANGED IN PINWHEEL-LIKE PATTERNS [J].
BONHOEFFER, T ;
GRINVALD, A .
NATURE, 1991, 353 (6343) :429-431
[2]   GEOMETRY OF ORIENTATION COLUMNS IN THE VISUAL-CORTEX [J].
BRAITENBERG, V ;
BRAITENBERG, C .
BIOLOGICAL CYBERNETICS, 1979, 33 (03) :179-186
[3]   NEURAL EDELMANISM - REPLY [J].
CRICK, F .
TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES, 1990, 13 (01) :13-14
[4]   NEURAL EDELMANISM [J].
CRICK, F .
TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES, 1989, 12 (07) :240-248
[5]  
DINSE HR, 1990, CONCEPTS NEUROSCI, V1, P199
[6]   COHERENT OSCILLATIONS - A MECHANISM OF FEATURE LINKING IN THE VISUAL-CORTEX - MULTIPLE ELECTRODE AND CORRELATION ANALYSES IN THE CAT [J].
ECKHORN, R ;
BAUER, R ;
JORDAN, W ;
BROSCH, M ;
KRUSE, W ;
MUNK, M ;
REITBOECK, HJ .
BIOLOGICAL CYBERNETICS, 1988, 60 (02) :121-130
[7]  
Edelman Gerald.M., 1978, THEMINDFUL BRAIN COR, P51, DOI DOI 10.1016/0896-6273(93)90304-A
[8]   INFINITELY MANY COMMENSURATE PHASES IN A SIMPLE ISING-MODEL [J].
FISHER, ME ;
SELKE, W .
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1980, 44 (23) :1502-1505
[9]   THE FRONTAL LOBES - UNCHARTED PROVINCES OF THE BRAIN - INTRODUCTION [J].
GOLDMANRAKIC, PS .
TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES, 1984, 7 (11) :425-&
[10]   STIMULUS-SPECIFIC NEURONAL OSCILLATIONS IN ORIENTATION COLUMNS OF CAT VISUAL-CORTEX [J].
GRAY, CM ;
SINGER, W .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1989, 86 (05) :1698-1702