Ruppin, Eytan
Distributed Synchrony of Spiking Neurons in a Hebbian Cell Assembly
Horn, David, Levy, Nir, Meilijson, Isaac, Ruppin, Eytan
We investigate the behavior of a Hebbian cell assembly of spiking neurons formed via a temporal synaptic learning curve. This learning function is based on recent experimental findings. It includes potentiation for short time delays between pre-and post-synaptic neuronal spiking, and depression for spiking events occuring in the reverse order. The coupling between the dynamics of the synaptic learning and of the neuronal activation leads to interesting results. We find that the cell assembly can fire asynchronously, but may also function in complete synchrony, or in distributed synchrony.
Distributed Synchrony of Spiking Neurons in a Hebbian Cell Assembly
Horn, David, Levy, Nir, Meilijson, Isaac, Ruppin, Eytan
We investigate the behavior of a Hebbian cell assembly of spiking neurons formed via a temporal synaptic learning curve. This learning function is based on recent experimental findings. It includes potentiation for short time delays between pre-and post-synaptic neuronal spiking, and depression for spiking events occuring in the reverse order. The coupling between the dynamics of the synaptic learning and of the neuronal activation leads to interesting results. We find that the cell assembly can fire asynchronously, but may also function in complete synchrony, or in distributed synchrony.
Multi-modular Associative Memory
Levy, Nir, Horn, David, Ruppin, Eytan
Motivated by the findings of modular structure in the association cortex, we study a multi-modular model of associative memory that can successfully store memory patterns with different levels of activity. We show that the segregation of synaptic conductances into intra-modular linear and inter-modular nonlinear ones considerably enhances the network's memory retrieval performance. Compared with the conventional, single-module associative memory network, the multi-modular network has two main advantages: It is less susceptible to damage to columnar input, and its response is consistent with the cognitive data pertaining to category specific impairment. 1 Introduction Cortical modules were observed in the somatosensory and visual cortices a few decades ago. These modules differ in their structure and functioning but are likely to be an elementary unit of processing in the mammalian cortex. Within each module the neurons are interconnected.
On Parallel versus Serial Processing: A Computational Study of Visual Search
Cohen, Eyal, Ruppin, Eytan
This paper presents a neural-model of pre-attentive visual processing. The model explains why certain displays can be processed very fast, "in parallel", while others require slower, "serial" processing, in subsequent attentional systems. Our approach stems from the observation that the visual environment is overflowing with diverse information, but the biological information-processing systems analyzing it have a limited capacity [1]. This apparent mismatch suggests that data compression should be performed at an early stage of perception, and that via an accompanying process of dimension reduction, only a few essential features of the visual display should be retained. We propose that only parallel displays incorporate global features that enable fast target detection, and hence they can be processed pre-attentively, with all items (target and dis tractors) examined at once.
On Parallel versus Serial Processing: A Computational Study of Visual Search
Cohen, Eyal, Ruppin, Eytan
Using displays of line orientations taken from Wolfe's experiments [1992], we study the hypothesis that the distinction between parallel versus serial processes arises from the availability of global information in the internal representations of the visual scene. The model operates in two phases. First, the visual displays are compressed via principal-component-analysis. Second, the compressed data is processed by a target detector module inorder to identify the existence of a target in the display. Our main finding is that targets in displays which were found experimentally tobe processed in parallel can be detected by the system, while targets in experimentally-serial displays cannot. This fundamental difference is explained via variance analysis of the compressed representations, providing a numerical criterion distinguishing parallelfrom serial displays. Our model yields a mapping of response-time slopes that is similar to Duncan and Humphreys's "search surface" [1989], providing an explicit formulation of their intuitive notion of feature similarity. It presents a neural realization ofthe processing that may underlie the classical metaphorical explanations of visual search.
Multi-modular Associative Memory
Levy, Nir, Horn, David, Ruppin, Eytan
Motivated by the findings of modular structure in the association cortex, we study a multi-modular model of associative memory that can successfully store memory patterns with different levels of activity. Weshow that the segregation of synaptic conductances into intra-modular linear and inter-modular nonlinear ones considerably enhances the network's memory retrieval performance. Compared with the conventional, single-module associative memory network, the multi-modular network has two main advantages: It is less susceptible todamage to columnar input, and its response is consistent with the cognitive data pertaining to category specific impairment. 1 Introduction Cortical modules were observed in the somatosensory and visual cortices a few decades ago. These modules differ in their structure and functioning but are likely to be an elementary unit of processing in the mammalian cortex. Within each module the neurons are interconnected.
On Parallel versus Serial Processing: A Computational Study of Visual Search
Cohen, Eyal, Ruppin, Eytan
This paper presents a neural-model of pre-attentive visual processing. The model explains why certain displays can be processed very fast, "in parallel", while others require slower, "serial" processing, in subsequent attentional systems. Our approach stems from the observation that the visual environment is overflowing with diverse information, but the biological information-processing systems analyzing it have a limited capacity [1]. This apparent mismatch suggests that data compression should be performed at an early stage of perception, and that via an accompanying process of dimension reduction, only a few essential features of the visual display should be retained. We propose that only parallel displays incorporate global features that enable fast target detection, and hence they can be processed pre-attentively, with all items (target and dis tractors) examined at once.
Multi-modular Associative Memory
Levy, Nir, Horn, David, Ruppin, Eytan
Motivated by the findings of modular structure in the association cortex, we study a multi-modular model of associative memory that can successfully store memory patterns with different levels of activity. We show that the segregation of synaptic conductances into intra-modular linear and inter-modular nonlinear ones considerably enhances the network's memory retrieval performance. Compared with the conventional, single-module associative memory network, the multi-modular network has two main advantages: It is less susceptible to damage to columnar input, and its response is consistent with the cognitive data pertaining to category specific impairment. 1 Introduction Cortical modules were observed in the somatosensory and visual cortices a few decades ago. These modules differ in their structure and functioning but are likely to be an elementary unit of processing in the mammalian cortex. Within each module the neurons are interconnected.