A scalable spiking amygdala model that explains fear conditioning, extinction, renewal and generalization

Author:

Duggins Peter12ORCID,Eliasmith Chris123

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Theoretical Neuroscience University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada

2. Department of Systems Design Engineering University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada

3. Department of Philosophy University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe amygdala (AMY) is widely implicated in fear learning and fear behaviour, but it remains unclear how the many biological components present within AMY interact to achieve these abilities. Building on previous work, we hypothesize that individual AMY nuclei represent different quantities and that fear conditioning arises from error‐driven learning on the synapses between AMY nuclei. We present a computational model of AMY that (a) recreates the divisions and connections between AMY nuclei and their constituent pyramidal and inhibitory neurons; (b) accommodates scalable high‐dimensional representations of external stimuli; (c) learns to associate complex stimuli with the presence (or absence) of an aversive stimulus; (d) preserves feature information when mapping inputs to salience estimates, such that these estimates generalize to similar stimuli; and (e) induces a diverse profile of neural responses within each nucleus. Our model predicts (1) defensive responses and neural activities in several experimental conditions, (2) the consequence of artificially ablating particular nuclei and (3) the tendency to generalize defensive responses to novel stimuli. We test these predictions by comparing model outputs to neural and behavioural data from animals and humans. Despite the relative simplicity of our model, we find significant overlap between simulated and empirical data, which supports our claim that the model captures many of the neural mechanisms that support fear conditioning. We conclude by comparing our model to other computational models and by characterizing the theoretical relationship between pattern separation and fear generalization in healthy versus anxious individuals.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Ontario Innovation Trust

Publisher

Wiley

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