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Efficient neural codes naturally emerge through gradient descent learning

Computer Science

Efficient neural codes naturally emerge through gradient descent learning

A. S. Benjamin, L. Zhang, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Ari S. Benjamin, Ling-Qi Zhang, Cheng Qiu, Alan A. Stocker, and Konrad P. Kording explores how artificial neural networks, when trained for object recognition, naturally develop a heightened sensitivity to common environmental features, much like human sensory systems. The study reveals that efficient codes result from gradient-like learning processes, a fascinating insight into the intersection of neuroscience and artificial intelligence.... show more
Abstract
Human sensory systems are more sensitive to common features in the environment than uncommon features. For example, small deviations from the more frequently encountered horizontal orientations can be more easily detected than small deviations from the less frequent diagonal ones. Here we find that artificial neural networks trained to recognize objects also have patterns of sensitivity that match the statistics of features in images. To interpret these findings, we show mathematically that learning with gradient descent in neural networks preferentially creates representations that are more sensitive to common features, a hallmark of efficient coding. This effect occurs in systems with otherwise unconstrained coding resources, and additionally when learning towards both supervised and unsupervised objectives. This result demonstrates that efficient codes can naturally emerge from gradient-like learning.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Dec 29, 2022
Authors
Ari S. Benjamin, Ling-Qi Zhang, Cheng Qiu, Alan A. Stocker, Konrad P. Kording
Tags
artificial neural networks
object recognition
gradient descent learning
sensitivity
efficient coding
supervised learning
unsupervised learning
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