A Special Role for Input Codes in Solving the Transverse Patterning Problem

  • Wu X
  • Tyrcha J
  • Levy W
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Abstract

Rats require a hippocampus to solve the transverse patterning problem. Here, a hippocampal model also solves this configural learning problem. The problem is hard: A learning paradigm, called progressive learning, is required. It is required by rats, humans, and the model. Second, input patterns within a sequence must be repeated. Such repetition increases the statistical dependence, a surprising observation if you assume statistical dependence is undesirable. Such repetition of the same patterns in a sequence facilitates the formation of local context neuronal firings. These neuronal firings are critical, and we hypothesize that they are analogous to place cells found in behaving animals.

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Wu, X., Tyrcha, J. M., & Levy, W. B. (1997). A Special Role for Input Codes in Solving the Transverse Patterning Problem. In Computational Neuroscience (pp. 885–889). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-9800-5_137

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