Title: Circus, Circuits
1Circus, Circuits
- Interesting Neural Networks
- Some actually occur in brains some are hypotheses
2Owl Audition
- The Barn Owl uses delay lines and coincidence
detectors (neurons that only fire when both
pre-synaptic axons are simultaneously
depolarized) to locate objects in horizontal and
vertical plane.
Far Right
From Left Ear
A
B
C
D
E
From Right Ear
Far Left
3Center-Surround Cells
ON center OFF surround cell
CS
Visual Field
Brain
Ganglia
CS firing pattern
Strong
C
Center Surround Inhibit
Retina
Medium
S
Stimulus
Weak
4On-Center -vs- Off-Center Retinal Ganglion Cells
- The primary visual receptors (rods cones)
actually turn OFF when hit by photons (light) and
are ON when they detect dark spots (Hubel, Eye,
Brain and Vision, 1988, pg. 54)
On-Center (Off-Surround)
Off-Center (On-Surround)
Bipolar Cells
Light
Light
Receptors
Receptors
These are non-intersecting pathways but are
drawn together to illustrate their similarities.
Excite Inhibit
Retinal Ganglion
5Line Detectors
Retinal Ganglia
Visual Cortex
On-Centers
45o Line
Off-Centers
To higher levels of the visual cortex
6Motion Detectors
- Riechard Detector (1961) - based on the
- flys visual system
- Works best when delay t2 - t1 t3 - t2
- ? normal (non-delayed) transmission time
450 bar moving left to right
t3
t2
t1
t3?
Delay
t32?
Delay
Delay
t2?
Coincidence detectors gt only fire when all
inputs are ON simultaneously.
7Lateral Inhibition Lines
Firing Rate
Output
Excite Inhibit
1
2
3
4
5
Firing Rate
Input
Neuron
- Neurons that stimulate themselves and inhibit
their near neighbors function as filters
8Lateral Inhibition in Visual Pathways
- Grossberg, S. (2003) in The Handbook of Brain
Theory and Neural Networks, pp. 594-600.
V2(2/3)
V1(2/3)
V2(4)
V1(4)
V2(6)
V1(6)
LGN
- 6 - 4 - 2/3 pathway/loop is self-excitatory
- Similar lateral inhib topology in V1 V2
Retinal ON Cell
9Central Pattern Generators (CPGs)
- Neural circuits for generating simple, repeated
patterns of activity. - E.g. gait patterns in N-legged animals.
- Ian Steward (1998). Lifes other secret. Ch.9
Overhead view of horse, goat, dog??
Standard Notation Fractions Phase diffs
Walking gait First move left rear leg, then left
front, then right rear, then right front.
10Generic Gait Generator
- Each animal species can perform many different
gaits. - Do we need a different wiring pattern for each
gait? - No! (Golubitsky, Stewart, Collins, Buono (1997))
- Goal A single circuit with adjustable delay
times. - Solution For an N-legged animal, 2 cross-linked
N-neuron loops.
Inter-loop delay
Intra-loop delay
By adjusting these TWO delay times, we can
generate all standard gait patterns for N-legged
animals!!
11Walking
Jumping
3/4
1/4
3/4
3/4
0
1/2
1/2
1/2
1/4
3/4
1/4
1/4
1/2
0
0
0
12Pacing
Trotting
0
1/2
1/2
0
1/2
0
1/2
0
0
1/2
1/2
0
13Brain Clocks
- Wright, Karen,Times of our Lives, Scientific
American, Sept. 2002 - In the cerebral cortex, a collection of neurons
with different firing patterns enables us to
record and reuse specific time intervals.
A
Time Signatures
A B C D
t1 0 1 0 1
t2 1 1 1 0
t3 1 1 0 0
t4 0 0 1 1
B
C
D
t1
t2
t3
t4
14Timing Circuit
1. A start signal (e.g. Dance instructor says
Begin) STN excites SNr, which then inhibits
all cortical oscillators, so they essentially
RESET to off. 2. Oscillators then resume their
normal diverse firing patterns, from same init
state. 3. A stop signal (e.g. Dance instructor)
SNc releases dopamine into striatum, causing
striatal cells to record the current time
signature via Hebbian Learning
Neural Oscillators from 10-40 Hz
Cerebral Cortex
B
A
C
D
STN
S
SNr
Striatum
SNc
Dopamine Signal gt Learn!
Excite
Inhibit
15Learning a Time Signature
Low
High
C
C
B
High
B
D
D
Low
A
A
STOP!! LEARN!!
S
S
- Non-associate Learning Strengthen pre-synaptic
axon since - a) it fired/depolarized, and b) significant
event (STOP) signalled. - After learning, S will only fire when B D are
active (i.e. after a time interval of duration
t1). Details are unclear as to whether A C
develop inhibitory links to S. - In future (e.g. when repeating the dance), the
instructor still says Go, which again resets
the cortical oscillators, but now the brain
generates its own STOP signal in the striatum,
when S fires gt student has learned t1! - Given enough diverse oscillators, student can
learn ANY interval.
16Cricket Phonotaxis
- Webb, B. (2001). Biorobotics Methods
Applications, Ch. 1. - Female Crickets only respond to songs with
particular carrier frequencies and syllable
durations.
Bug Off!
- Syllable Duration
- Carrying Frequency 1/Inter-syllable period
17Preferred Carrier Frequency
- Distance between the two ear-drums is the
critical determinant. If its ONE QUARTER the
songs inter-syllable wavelength, then the
eardrums vibrate most strongly. Here P period
of the sound wave.
Eardrums R L
Time T
Peak
- From T to TP/4, the peak travels across the body
and meets the right eardrum, causing it to
vibrate, thus generating a new peak. - From TP/4 to TP/2, the new peak travels exactly
1/4 wavelength ear-to-ear distance. - At time TP/2, the left ear has a) a trough on
the outside, and b) a peak on the inside. - Thats a max pressure difference gt the eardrum
is maximally stimulated. - The cricket is happy!!
Trough
Time TP/2
18Preferred Syllable Duration
- Appears to be determined in the brain, but
details only partially known. - Biorobotics researchers (Webb et. al.) provide
minimal ANNs that are sufficient explanations.
Turn Right
Turn Left
- Each auditory neuron stimulates the corresponding
motor neuron and inhibits the opposite motor
neuron. - Each of the 4 neurons has a very detailed (but
standard) model leaky integrate-and-fire - AN gt MN synapses are temporarily depressed after
the AN fires
Motor Neurons
MNR
MNL
ANR
ANL
Auditory Neurons
Right Ear
Left Ear
19Leaky Integrate-and-Fire Neural Models
Leak
Integrate
- tmdVi/dt b(EL - Vi) a?wijzj
- zj (1 eVi)-1 Standard sigmoidal transfer
function - Vi voltage inside the neuron
- EL voltage outside the neuron (standard value
-55mV) - zj firing rate of neuron j
- wij synaptic weight from neuron j to neuron i.
- a excitation factor, b leakage factor, tm
time scaling factor
z1wi1
zi
Vi
z2wi2
Leak
z3wi3
EL
20AP Voltage Spike
- Although the voltage of a neuron changes
constantly, only large abrupt changes (action
potentials) can be transmitted to other neurons.
Overshoot
40 mV
K gates open. K leaves cell. Na gates still
open
Na gates close. K gates still open.
0 mV
Rising Phase
Falling Phase
Na gates open. Na enters cell.
K gates close.
-65 mV
Resting Potential
Undershoot
21Habituation
- When a neuron fires weakly, but frequently, its
axonal synapses weaken. - After a little rest, the synapse returns to
normal strength. - tmdwij/dt c(wij() - wij) - S(zj)
- wij() base value for wij
- S(zj) stimulus function lower zj gt higher S
wij
S
t
zj
Vj
Vi
wij
zj
t
22Preferred Syllable Duration
- Assume a stimulus on the left side of the
cricket. - High frequency (short wavelength) sound has a
quickly-decaying amplitude with distance, so the
left ear gets a stronger signal than the right.
- Neuron ANL integrates the inputs from the left
ear drum and fires groups of pulses with
durations syllable durations.
- This inhibits motor neuron MNR but stimulates
MNL, which integrates the inputs from ANL and
eventually begins to fire. However, it
integrates more slowly than ANL and therefore
fires less frequently.
- The cricket turns left. It is attracted to the
song.
23Null Poeng
- Stimulus again from left side, but now the
syllables are very short and frequent..
Syllable
Incoming sound
- Neuron ANL integrates the inputs from the left
ear drum and fires constantly, with very few
significant gaps.
- This inhibits motor neuron MNR and stimulates
MNL. - But, now the ANL-MNL synapse habituates due to
the constant firing of ANL (and hence no break in
which to regain strength). - So the signals that ANL sends to MNL are WEAK,
and MNL never integrates enough charge to fire.
- The cricket is not interested.
24Another Loser
- Stimulus again from left side, but now the
syllables are very long, with a large gap between
syllables..
Syllable
Incoming sound
- Neuron ANL integrates the inputs from the left
ear drum and fires long sets of pulses with long
gaps.
ANL Response
- This inhibits motor neuron MNR and stimulates
MNL. - But, now the gap is too long MNL almost fires
during a syllable, but then a lot of voltage
LEAKS out during the inter-syllable gap. - So although ANLs signals are strong, MNL leaks
too much and can never integrate enough charge to
fire.
- This is cricket is very picky!