Harnessing behavioral diversity to understand neural computations for cognition.

Journal: Current opinion in neurobiology
Published Date:

Abstract

With the increasing acquisition of large-scale neural recordings comes the challenge of inferring the computations they perform and understanding how these give rise to behavior. Here, we review emerging conceptual and technological advances that begin to address this challenge, garnering insights from both biological and artificial neural networks. We argue that neural data should be recorded during rich behavioral tasks, to model cognitive processes and estimate latent behavioral variables. Careful quantification of animal movements can also provide a more complete picture of how movements shape neural dynamics and reflect changes in brain state, such as arousal or stress. Artificial neural networks (ANNs) could serve as artificial model organisms to connect neural dynamics and rich behavioral data. ANNs have already begun to reveal how a wide range of different behaviors can be implemented, generating hypotheses about how observed neural activity might drive behavior and explaining diversity in behavioral strategies.

Authors

  • Simon Musall
    Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Neuroscience, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA.
  • Anne E Urai
    Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Neuroscience, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA.
  • David Sussillo
    Department of Electrical Engineering and Neurosciences Program, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
  • Anne K Churchland
    Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Neuroscience, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA. Electronic address: churchland@cshl.edu.