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Distinguishing examples while building concepts in hippocampal and artificial networks
PsychologyNature Communications

Distinguishing examples while building concepts in hippocampal and artificial networks

L. Kang and T. Toyoizumi

Discover how the hippocampal subfield CA3 camps its memories through both correlated and decorrelated pathways! This cutting-edge research by Louis Kang and Taro Toyoizumi unveils the dual encoding strategies of neural networks, demonstrating groundbreaking insights into memory storage and multitask learning enhancements.... show more
Abstract
The hippocampal subfield CA3 is thought to function as an auto-associative network that stores experiences as memories. Information from these experiences arrives directly from the entorhinal cortex as well as indirectly through the dentate gyrus, which performs sparsification and decorrelation. The computational purpose for these dual input pathways has not been firmly established. We model CA3 as a Hopfield-like network that stores both dense, correlated encodings and sparse, decorrelated encodings. As more memories are stored, the former merge along shared features while the latter remain distinct. We verify our model's prediction in rat CA3 place cells, which exhibit more distinct tuning during theta phases with sparser activity. Finally, we find that neural networks trained in multitask learning benefit from a loss term that promotes both correlated and decorrelated representations. Thus, the complementary encodings we have found in CA3 can provide broad computational advantages for solving complex tasks.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jan 20, 2024
Authors
Louis Kang, Taro Toyoizumi
Tags
hippocampal subfield CA3memory storageentorhinal cortexneural networksmultitask learningdecorrelated representationstheta phases
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