1,840 research outputs found
Embodied learning of a generative neural model for biological motion perception and inference
Although an action observation network and mirror neurons for understanding the actions and intentions of others have been under deep, interdisciplinary consideration over recent years, it remains largely unknown how the brain manages to map visually perceived biological motion of others onto its own motor system. This paper shows how such a mapping may be established, even if the biologically motion is visually perceived from a new vantage point. We introduce a learning artificial neural network model and evaluate it on full body motion tracking recordings. The model implements an embodied, predictive inference approach. It first learns to correlate and segment multimodal sensory streams of own bodily motion. In doing so, it becomes able to anticipate motion progression, to complete missing modal information, and to self-generate learned motion sequences. When biological motion of another person is observed, this self-knowledge is utilized to recognize similar motion patterns and predict their progress. Due to the relative encodings, the model shows strong robustness in recognition despite observing rather large varieties of body morphology and posture dynamics. By additionally equipping the model with the capability to rotate its visual frame of reference, it is able to deduce the visual perspective onto the observed person, establishing full consistency to the embodied self-motion encodings by means of active inference. In further support of its neuro-cognitive plausibility, we also model typical bistable perceptions when crucial depth information is missing. In sum, the introduced neural model proposes a solution to the problem of how the human brain may establish correspondence between observed bodily motion and its own motor system, thus offering a mechanism that supports the development of mirror neurons
Digital twin brain: a bridge between biological intelligence and artificial intelligence
In recent years, advances in neuroscience and artificial intelligence have
paved the way for unprecedented opportunities for understanding the complexity
of the brain and its emulation by computational systems. Cutting-edge
advancements in neuroscience research have revealed the intricate relationship
between brain structure and function, while the success of artificial neural
networks highlights the importance of network architecture. Now is the time to
bring them together to better unravel how intelligence emerges from the brain's
multiscale repositories. In this review, we propose the Digital Twin Brain
(DTB) as a transformative platform that bridges the gap between biological and
artificial intelligence. It consists of three core elements: the brain
structure that is fundamental to the twinning process, bottom-layer models to
generate brain functions, and its wide spectrum of applications. Crucially,
brain atlases provide a vital constraint, preserving the brain's network
organization within the DTB. Furthermore, we highlight open questions that
invite joint efforts from interdisciplinary fields and emphasize the
far-reaching implications of the DTB. The DTB can offer unprecedented insights
into the emergence of intelligence and neurological disorders, which holds
tremendous promise for advancing our understanding of both biological and
artificial intelligence, and ultimately propelling the development of
artificial general intelligence and facilitating precision mental healthcare
The Dynamic Brain: From Spiking Neurons to Neural Masses and Cortical Fields
The cortex is a complex system, characterized by its dynamics and architecture,
which underlie many functions such as action, perception, learning, language,
and cognition. Its structural architecture has been studied for more than a
hundred years; however, its dynamics have been addressed much less thoroughly.
In this paper, we review and integrate, in a unifying framework, a variety of
computational approaches that have been used to characterize the dynamics of the
cortex, as evidenced at different levels of measurement. Computational models at
different space–time scales help us understand the fundamental
mechanisms that underpin neural processes and relate these processes to
neuroscience data. Modeling at the single neuron level is necessary because this
is the level at which information is exchanged between the computing elements of
the brain; the neurons. Mesoscopic models tell us how neural elements interact
to yield emergent behavior at the level of microcolumns and cortical columns.
Macroscopic models can inform us about whole brain dynamics and interactions
between large-scale neural systems such as cortical regions, the thalamus, and
brain stem. Each level of description relates uniquely to neuroscience data,
from single-unit recordings, through local field potentials to functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), electroencephalogram (EEG), and
magnetoencephalogram (MEG). Models of the cortex can establish which types of
large-scale neuronal networks can perform computations and characterize their
emergent properties. Mean-field and related formulations of dynamics also play
an essential and complementary role as forward models that can be inverted given
empirical data. This makes dynamic models critical in integrating theory and
experiments. We argue that elaborating principled and informed models is a
prerequisite for grounding empirical neuroscience in a cogent theoretical
framework, commensurate with the achievements in the physical sciences
NASA JSC neural network survey results
A survey of Artificial Neural Systems in support of NASA's (Johnson Space Center) Automatic Perception for Mission Planning and Flight Control Research Program was conducted. Several of the world's leading researchers contributed papers containing their most recent results on artificial neural systems. These papers were broken into categories and descriptive accounts of the results make up a large part of this report. Also included is material on sources of information on artificial neural systems such as books, technical reports, software tools, etc
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Testing and Analysis of a Computational Model of Human Rhythm Perception
This thesis presents an original methodology, as detailed below, applied to the testing of an existing computational model of human rhythm perception. Since the computational model instantiates neural resonance theory (Large and Snyder,2009), the thesis also tests that theory. Neural resonance theory is a key target for testing since, as contrasted with many other theories of human rhythm perception, it has relatively strong physiological plausibility. Rather than simply matching overt features of human rhythm perception, neural resonance theory shows how these features might plausibly emerge from low-level properties of interacting neurons.
The thesis tests the theory using several distinct research methods. The model stood up well to each family of tests, subject to limitations that are analysed in detail.
Firstly, the responses of the model to several types of polyrhythmic stimuli were compared with existing empirical data on human responses regarding beat identification to the same stimuli, at a variety of tempi. Polyrhythmic stimuli closely resemble real life complex rhythmical stimuli such as music, and were used for the first time to test the model. It was found that the set of categories of response predicted by the model matched human behaviour.
Secondly, the model was systematically analysed by exploring the degree of dependence of its behaviour on the values of its parameters (sensitivity analysis). The behaviour of the model was found to retain consistency in the face of systematic numerical manipulation of its parameters.
Thirdly, the behaviour of the model was compared to that of related models. In particular, the focal computational model, which balances physiological plausibility with mathematical convenience, was compared with other models that relate more directly to brain physiology. In each case, all relevant behaviours were found to be closely in line.
Lastly, the outputs of the model under polyrhythmic stimuli were analysed to make new testable predictions about previously unobserved human behaviour regarding the time it takes for people to perceive beat in polyrhythms. These predictions led to the design and conduction of new human experimental studies. It was found that the model had successfully predicted previously unobserved aspects of human behaviour, more specifically it predicted the timescale within which people start to perceive beat in a given polyrhythmic stimulus
Rats spontaneously perceive global motion direction of drifting plaids
Computing global motion direction of extended visual objects is a hallmark of primate high-level vision. Although neurons selective for global motion have also been found in mouse visual cortex, it remains unknown whether rodents can combine multiple motion signals into global, integrated percepts. To address this question, we trained two groups of rats to discriminate either gratings (G group) or plaids (i.e., superpositions of gratings with different orientations; P group) drifting horizontally along opposite directions. After the animals learned the task, we applied a visual priming paradigm, where presentation of the target stimulus was preceded by the brief presentation of either a grating or a plaid. The extent to which rat responses to the targets were biased by such prime stimuli provided a measure of the spontaneous, perceived similarity between primes and targets. We found that gratings and plaids, when uses as primes, were equally effective at biasing the perception of plaid direction for the rats of the P group. Conversely, for G group, only the gratings acted as effective prime stimuli, while the plaids failed to alter the perception of grating direction. To interpret these observations, we simulated a decision neuron reading out the representations of gratings and plaids, as conveyed by populations of either component or pattern cells (i.e., local or global motion detectors). We concluded that the findings for the P group are highly consistent with the existence of a population of pattern cells, playing a functional role similar to that demonstrated in primates. We also explored different scenarios that could explain the failure of the plaid stimuli to elicit a sizable priming magnitude for the G group. These simulations yielded testable predictions about the properties of motion representations in rodent visual cortex at the single-cell and circuitry level, thus paving the way to future neurophysiology experiments
Neural models of inter-cortical networks in the primate visual system for navigation, attention, path perception, and static and kinetic figure-ground perception
Vision provides the primary means by which many animals distinguish foreground objects from their background and coordinate locomotion through complex environments. The present thesis focuses on mechanisms within the visual system that afford figure-ground segregation and self-motion perception. These processes are modeled as emergent outcomes of dynamical interactions among neural populations in several brain areas. This dissertation specifies and simulates how border-ownership signals emerge in cortex, and how the medial superior temporal area (MSTd) represents path of travel and heading, in the presence of independently moving objects (IMOs).
Neurons in visual cortex that signal border-ownership, the perception that a border belongs to a figure and not its background, have been identified but the underlying mechanisms have been unclear. A model is presented that demonstrates that inter-areal interactions across model visual areas V1-V2-V4 afford border-ownership signals similar to those reported in electrophysiology for visual displays containing figures defined by luminance contrast. Competition between model neurons with different receptive field sizes is crucial for reconciling the occlusion of one object by another. The model is extended to determine border-ownership when object borders are kinetically-defined, and to detect the location and size of shapes, despite the curvature of their boundary contours.
Navigation in the real world requires humans to travel along curved paths. Many perceptual models have been proposed that focus on heading, which specifies the direction of travel along straight paths, but not on path curvature. In primates, MSTd has been implicated in heading perception. A model of V1, medial temporal area (MT), and MSTd is developed herein that demonstrates how MSTd neurons can simultaneously encode path curvature and heading. Human judgments of heading are accurate in rigid environments, but are biased in the presence of IMOs. The model presented here explains the bias through recurrent connectivity in MSTd and avoids the use of differential motion detectors which, although used in existing models to discount the motion of an IMO relative to its background, is not biologically plausible. Reported modulation of the MSTd population due to attention is explained through competitive dynamics between subpopulations responding to bottom-up and top- down signals
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