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Transcript
EMBARGO: June 10th, 2016 11 AM Pacific / 2 PM Eastern
The Primate Brain is “pre-adapted” to
Face Potentially Any Situation.
Scientists have shown how the brain anticipates all of the new situations that it may encounter in a
lifetime by creating a special kind of neural network that is “pre-adapted” to face any eventuality.
This emerges from a new neuroscience study published in PLOS Computational Biology.
Enel et al at the INSERM in France investigate one of the most noteworthy properties of primate
behavior, its diversity and adaptability. Human and non-human primates can learn an astonishing
variety of novel behaviors that could not have been directly anticipated by evolution – we now
understand that this ability to cope with new situations is due to the “pre-adapted” nature of the
primate brain.
This study shows that this seemingly miraculous
pre-adaptation comes from connections between
neurons that form recurrent loops where inputs
can rebound and mix in the network, like waves
in a pond, thus called “reservoir”
computing. This mix of the inputs allows a
potentially universal representation of
combinations of the inputs that can then be used
to learn the right behaviour for a new situation.
The authors demonstrate this by training a
reservoir network to perform a novel problem
solving task. They then compared the activity of
neurons in the model with activity of neurons in
the prefrontal cortex of a research primate that was trained to perform the same task. Remarkably,
there were striking similarities in the activation of neurons in both the reservoir model and the
primate.
This breakthrough shows that we have taken big step towards understanding the local recurrent
connectivity in the brain that prepares primates to face unlimited situations. This research shows
that by allowing essentially unlimited combinations of internal representations in the network of
the brain, one of them is always on hand for the given situation.
In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS
Computational Biology: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.pcbi.1004967
Press-only preview: http://blogs.plos.org/everyone/files/2016/06/Dominey-pcbi.1004967-presspreview.pdf
Contact: Peter Ford Dominey, [email protected]
Phone Number +33 472913484
Citation: Enel P, Procyk E, Quilodran R, Dominey PF (2016) Reservoir Computing Properties of
Neural Dynamics in Prefrontal Cortex. PLoS Comput Biol 12(6): e1004967.
doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004967
Image Credit: Craig ONeal / Flickr
Image Link: http://blogs.plos.org/everyone/files/2016/06/Dominey-striking-image.jpg
Funding: The present work was funded by European research projects IST- 231267 (Organic),
FP7 270490 (EFAA), FP7 612139 (WYSIWYD), and CRCNS NSF-ANR ANR-14-NEUC-0005-1
(Spaquence). EP is funded by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche ANR-06-JCJC-0048 and
ANR- 11- BSV4-0006, and by the labex CORTEX ANR-11- LABX-0042. The authors declare no
competing financial interests.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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