The Temporal Winner-Take-All Readout

被引:10
|
作者
Shamir, Maoz [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Dept Physiol, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
[2] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Zlotowski Ctr Neurosci, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
关键词
SPATIAL RECEPTIVE-FIELDS; PRIMARY AUDITORY-CORTEX; PSYCHOPHYSICAL PERFORMANCE; SOMATOSENSORY CORTEX; VISUAL-CORTEX; SPIKE; INFORMATION; NETWORKS; NEURONS; MODEL;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000286
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
How can the central nervous system make accurate decisions about external stimuli at short times on the basis of the noisy responses of nerve cell populations? It has been suggested that spike time latency is the source of fast decisions. Here, we propose a simple and fast readout mechanism, the temporal Winner-Take-All (tWTA), and undertake a study of its accuracy. The tWTA is studied in the framework of a statistical model for the dynamic response of a nerve cell population to an external stimulus. Each cell is characterized by a preferred stimulus, a unique value of the external stimulus for which it responds fastest. The tWTA estimate for the stimulus is the preferred stimulus of the cell that fired the first spike in the entire population. We then pose the questions: How accurate is the tWTA readout? What are the parameters that govern this accuracy? What are the effects of noise correlations and baseline firing? We find that tWTA sensitivity to the stimulus grows algebraically fast with the number of cells in the population, N, in contrast to the logarithmic slow scaling of the conventional rate-WTA sensitivity with N. Noise correlations in first-spike times of different cells can limit the accuracy of the tWTA readout, even in the limit of large N, similar to the effect that has been observed in population coding theory. We show that baseline firing also has a detrimental effect on tWTA accuracy. We suggest a generalization of the tWTA, the n-tWTA, which estimates the stimulus by the identity of the group of cells firing the first n spikes and show how this simple generalization can overcome the detrimental effect of baseline firing. Thus, the tWTA can provide fast and accurate responses discriminating between a small number of alternatives. High accuracy in estimation of a continuous stimulus can be obtained using the n-tWTA.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] An attention mechanism network based on the winner-take-all
    Li H.
    Zhang S.
    Ma D.
    Mo W.
    Digital Signal Processing: A Review Journal, 2024, 154
  • [42] Explaining Excess Entry in Winner-Take-All Markets
    Laferriere, Vincent
    Staubli, David
    Thoni, Christian
    MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2023, 69 (02) : 1050 - 1069
  • [43] Collective Stability of Networks of Winner-Take-All Circuits
    Rutishauser, Ueli
    Douglas, Rodney J.
    Slotine, Jean-Jacques
    NEURAL COMPUTATION, 2011, 23 (03) : 735 - 773
  • [44] WINNER-TAKE-ALL SPATIAL LIGHT-MODULATOR
    SLAGLE, TM
    WAGNER, K
    OPTICS LETTERS, 1992, 17 (16) : 1164 - 1166
  • [45] Higher education: The ultimate winner-take-all market?
    Frank, RH
    FORUM FUTURES: EXPLORING THE FUTURE OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2000 PAPERS, 2001, : 3 - 12
  • [46] The shape of luck and competition in winner-take-all tournaments
    Ryvkin, Dmitry
    Drugov, Mikhail
    THEORETICAL ECONOMICS, 2020, 15 (04) : 1587 - 1626
  • [47] Winner-Take-All Games: The Strategic Optimisation of Rank
    Alpern, Steve
    Howard, J. V.
    OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 2017, 65 (05) : 1165 - 1176
  • [48] COMPETITIVE LEARNING WITH GENERALIZED WINNER-TAKE-ALL ACTIVATION
    LEMMON, M
    KUMAR, BVKV
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL NETWORKS, 1992, 3 (02): : 167 - 175
  • [49] Improving the resolution of Lazzaro winner-take-all circuit
    Sekerkiran, B
    Cilingiroglu, U
    1997 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NEURAL NETWORKS, VOLS 1-4, 1997, : 1005 - 1008
  • [50] CMOS winner-take-all circuits: A detail comparison
    Gunay, ZS
    SanchezSinencio, E
    ISCAS '97 - PROCEEDINGS OF 1997 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS, VOLS I - IV: CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS IN THE INFORMATION AGE, 1997, : 41 - 44