From implicit learning to explicit representations

04/05/2022
by   Naomi Chaix-Eichel, et al.
0

Using the reservoir computing framework, we demonstrate how a simple model can solve an alternation task without an explicit working memory. To do so, a simple bot equipped with sensors navigates inside a 8-shaped maze and turns alternatively right and left at the same intersection in the maze. The analysis of the model's internal activity reveals that the memory is actually encoded inside the dynamics of the network. However, such dynamic working memory is not accessible such as to bias the behavior into one of the two attractors (left and right). To do so, external cues are fed to the bot such that it can follow arbitrary sequences, instructed by the cue. This model highlights the idea that procedural learning and its internal representation can be dissociated. If the former allows to produce behavior, it is not sufficient to allow for an explicit and fine-grained manipulation.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
06/18/2018

A Simple Reservoir Model of Working Memory with Real Values

The prefrontal cortex is known to be involved in many high-level cogniti...
research
01/17/2020

A Robust Model of Gated Working Memory

Gated working memory is defined as the capacity of holding arbitrary inf...
research
10/23/2019

Working memory facilitates reward-modulated Hebbian learning in recurrent neural networks

Reservoir computing is a powerful tool to explain how the brain learns t...
research
06/27/2023

CASEIN: Cascading Explicit and Implicit Control for Fine-grained Emotion Intensity Regulation

Existing fine-grained intensity regulation methods rely on explicit cont...
research
09/28/2018

Learning to Remember, Forget and Ignore using Attention Control in Memory

Typical neural networks with external memory do not effectively separate...
research
10/28/2017

Left-Right Skip-DenseNets for Coarse-to-Fine Object Categorization

Inspired by the recent neuroscience studies on the left-right asymmetry ...
research
12/10/2021

Encoding priors in the brain: a reinforcement learning model for mouse decision making

In two-alternative forced choice tasks, prior knowledge can improve perf...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset