Why do some neurons in cortex respond to information in a selective manner? Insights from artificial neural networks.

Journal: Cognition
Published Date:

Abstract

Why do some neurons in hippocampus and cortex respond to information in a highly selective manner? It has been hypothesized that neurons in hippocampus encode information in a highly selective manner in order to support fast learning without catastrophic interference, and that neurons in cortex encode information in a highly selective manner in order to co-activate multiple items in short-term memory (STM) without suffering a superposition catastrophe. However, the latter hypothesis is at odds with the widespread view that neural coding in the cortex is highly distributed in order to support generalization. We report a series of simulations that characterize the conditions in which recurrent Parallel Distributed Processing (PDP) models of immediate serial can recall novel words. We found that these models learned localist codes when they succeeded in generalizing to novel words. That is, just as fast learning may explain selective coding in hippocampus, STM and generalization may help explain the existence of selective codes in cortex.

Authors

  • Jeffrey S Bowers
    University of Bristol, United Kingdom. Electronic address: j.bowers@bristol.ac.uk.
  • Ivan I Vankov
    University of Bristol, United Kingdom.
  • Markus F Damian
    University of Bristol, United Kingdom.
  • Colin J Davis
    University of Bristol, United Kingdom.