910 research outputs found

    Gradient-free activation maximization for identifying effective stimuli

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    A fundamental question for understanding brain function is what types of stimuli drive neurons to fire. In visual neuroscience, this question has also been posted as characterizing the receptive field of a neuron. The search for effective stimuli has traditionally been based on a combination of insights from previous studies, intuition, and luck. Recently, the same question has emerged in the study of units in convolutional neural networks (ConvNets), and together with this question a family of solutions were developed that are generally referred to as "feature visualization by activation maximization." We sought to bring in tools and techniques developed for studying ConvNets to the study of biological neural networks. However, one key difference that impedes direct translation of tools is that gradients can be obtained from ConvNets using backpropagation, but such gradients are not available from the brain. To circumvent this problem, we developed a method for gradient-free activation maximization by combining a generative neural network with a genetic algorithm. We termed this method XDream (EXtending DeepDream with real-time evolution for activation maximization), and we have shown that this method can reliably create strong stimuli for neurons in the macaque visual cortex (Ponce et al., 2019). In this paper, we describe extensive experiments characterizing the XDream method by using ConvNet units as in silico models of neurons. We show that XDream is applicable across network layers, architectures, and training sets; examine design choices in the algorithm; and provide practical guides for choosing hyperparameters in the algorithm. XDream is an efficient algorithm for uncovering neuronal tuning preferences in black-box networks using a vast and diverse stimulus space.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, 3 table

    Unsupervised Learning of Visual Structure using Predictive Generative Networks

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    The ability to predict future states of the environment is a central pillar of intelligence. At its core, effective prediction requires an internal model of the world and an understanding of the rules by which the world changes. Here, we explore the internal models developed by deep neural networks trained using a loss based on predicting future frames in synthetic video sequences, using a CNN-LSTM-deCNN framework. We first show that this architecture can achieve excellent performance in visual sequence prediction tasks, including state-of-the-art performance in a standard 'bouncing balls' dataset (Sutskever et al., 2009). Using a weighted mean-squared error and adversarial loss (Goodfellow et al., 2014), the same architecture successfully extrapolates out-of-the-plane rotations of computer-generated faces. Furthermore, despite being trained end-to-end to predict only pixel-level information, our Predictive Generative Networks learn a representation of the latent structure of the underlying three-dimensional objects themselves. Importantly, we find that this representation is naturally tolerant to object transformations, and generalizes well to new tasks, such as classification of static images. Similar models trained solely with a reconstruction loss fail to generalize as effectively. We argue that prediction can serve as a powerful unsupervised loss for learning rich internal representations of high-level object features.Comment: under review as conference paper at ICLR 201
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