A geometrical solution underlies general neural principle for serial ordering

被引:3
作者
Di Antonio, Gabriele [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Raglio, Sofia [1 ,4 ]
Mattia, Maurizio [1 ]
机构
[1] Ist Super Sanita, Natl Ctr Radiat Protect & Computat Phys, Rome, Italy
[2] Roma Tre Univ Rome, PhD Program Appl Elect, Rome, Italy
[3] Res Ctr Enr Fermi, Rome, Italy
[4] Sapienza Univ Rome, PhD Program Behav Neurosci, Rome, Italy
关键词
WEBER-FECHNER LAW; SHORT-TERM-MEMORY; MAGICAL NUMBER 7; TRANSITIVE INFERENCE; REPRESENTATIONAL GEOMETRY; MIXED SELECTIVITY; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; MODEL; COMPUTATION; NETWORKS;
D O I
10.1038/s41467-024-52240-6
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
A general mathematical description of how the brain sequentially encodes knowledge remains elusive. We propose a linear solution for serial learning tasks, based on the concept of mixed selectivity in high-dimensional neural state spaces. In our framework, neural representations of items in a sequence are projected along a "geometric" mental line learned through classical conditioning. The model successfully solves serial position tasks and explains behaviors observed in humans and animals during transitive inference tasks amidst noisy sensory input and stochastic neural activity. This approach extends to recurrent neural networks performing motor decision tasks, where the same geometric mental line correlates with motor plans and modulates network activity according to the symbolic distance between items. Serial ordering is thus predicted to emerge as a monotonic mapping between sensory input and behavioral output, highlighting a possible pivotal role for motor-related associative cortices in transitive inference tasks. How the brain sequentially encodes knowledge is not fully understood. Here authors propose a geometric framework for the elusive neural principles of serial reasoning and sequence encoding. Neural representations are theorized to align along a learned mental line, solving serial position and transitive inference tasks.
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页数:17
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