AI Article Synopsis

  • The hippocampus plays a critical role in associative memory tasks, with recent theories linking its predictive coding mechanisms to these memory processes.
  • A new computational model based on hierarchical predictive networks was developed to better reflect the recurrent connections found in the CA3 region of the hippocampus, which are important for associative memory.
  • The proposed models learn covariance information implicitly and are numerically stable, offering a more biologically accurate framework for understanding hippocampal memory formation and its interactions with the neocortex.

Article Abstract

The computational principles adopted by the hippocampus in associative memory (AM) tasks have been one of the most studied topics in computational and theoretical neuroscience. Recent theories suggested that AM and the predictive activities of the hippocampus could be described within a unitary account, and that predictive coding underlies the computations supporting AM in the hippocampus. Following this theory, a computational model based on classical hierarchical predictive networks was proposed and was shown to perform well in various AM tasks. However, this fully hierarchical model did not incorporate recurrent connections, an architectural component of the CA3 region of the hippocampus that is crucial for AM. This makes the structure of the model inconsistent with the known connectivity of CA3 and classical recurrent models such as Hopfield Networks, which learn the covariance of inputs through their recurrent connections to perform AM. Earlier PC models that learn the covariance information of inputs explicitly via recurrent connections seem to be a solution to these issues. Here, we show that although these models can perform AM, they do it in an implausible and numerically unstable way. Instead, we propose alternatives to these earlier covariance-learning predictive coding networks, which learn the covariance information implicitly and plausibly, and can use dendritic structures to encode prediction errors. We show analytically that our proposed models are perfectly equivalent to the earlier predictive coding model learning covariance explicitly, and encounter no numerical issues when performing AM tasks in practice. We further show that our models can be combined with hierarchical predictive coding networks to model the hippocampo-neocortical interactions. Our models provide a biologically plausible approach to modelling the hippocampal network, pointing to a potential computational mechanism during hippocampal memory formation and recall, which employs both predictive coding and covariance learning based on the recurrent network structure of the hippocampus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10132551PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010719DOI Listing

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