Cortical oscillations support sampling-based computations in spiking neural networks

Author:

Korcsak-Gorzo AgnesORCID,Müller Michael G.ORCID,Baumbach AndreasORCID,Leng LuziweiORCID,Breitwieser Oliver J.ORCID,van Albada Sacha J.ORCID,Senn WalterORCID,Meier Karlheinz,Legenstein RobertORCID,Petrovici Mihai A.ORCID

Abstract

Being permanently confronted with an uncertain world, brains have faced evolutionary pressure to represent this uncertainty in order to respond appropriately. Often, this requires visiting multiple interpretations of the available information or multiple solutions to an encountered problem. This gives rise to the so-called mixing problem: since all of these “valid” states represent powerful attractors, but between themselves can be very dissimilar, switching between such states can be difficult. We propose that cortical oscillations can be effectively used to overcome this challenge. By acting as an effective temperature, background spiking activity modulates exploration. Rhythmic changes induced by cortical oscillations can then be interpreted as a form of simulated tempering. We provide a rigorous mathematical discussion of this link and study some of its phenomenological implications in computer simulations. This identifies a new computational role of cortical oscillations and connects them to various phenomena in the brain, such as sampling-based probabilistic inference, memory replay, multisensory cue combination, and place cell flickering.

Funder

Baden-Württemberg Stiftung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

European Union Seventh Framework Programme

Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft

Austrian Science Fund

Manfred Stärk Foundation

Heidelberg Graduate School of Fundamental Physics

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Computational Theory and Mathematics,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology,Modeling and Simulation,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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