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      Cortico-cerebellar networks as decoupling neural interfaces

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          Abstract

          The brain solves the credit assignment problem remarkably well. For credit to be assigned across neural networks they must, in principle, wait for specific neural computations to finish. How the brain deals with this inherent locking problem has remained unclear. Deep learning methods suffer from similar locking constraints both on the forward and feedback phase. Recently, decoupled neural interfaces (DNIs) were introduced as a solution to the forward and feedback locking problems in deep networks. Here we propose that a specialised brain region, the cerebellum, helps the cerebral cortex solve similar locking problems akin to DNIs. To demonstrate the potential of this framework we introduce a systems-level model in which a recurrent cortical network receives online temporal feedback predictions from a cerebellar module. We test this cortico-cerebellar recurrent neural network (ccRNN) model on a number of sensorimotor (line and digit drawing) and cognitive tasks (pattern recognition and caption generation) that have been shown to be cerebellar-dependent. In all tasks, we observe that ccRNNs facilitates learning while reducing ataxia-like behaviours, consistent with classical experimental observations. Moreover, our model also explains recent behavioural and neuronal observations while making several testable predictions across multiple levels. Overall, our work offers a novel perspective on the cerebellum as a brain-wide decoupling machine for efficient credit assignment and opens a new avenue between deep learning and neuroscience.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          21 October 2021
          Article
          2110.11501
          96089086-ed40-425b-8db0-b2ce285c4cdd

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          To appear in Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 35 (NeurIPS 2021); 15 pages and 5 figures in the main manuscript; 8 pages and 8 figures in the supplementary material
          q-bio.NC cs.LG

          Artificial intelligence,Neurosciences
          Artificial intelligence, Neurosciences

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