The Hamiltonian Brain: Efficient Probabilistic Inference with Excitatory-Inhibitory Neural Circuit Dynamics
Laurence Aitchison and
Máté Lengyel
PLOS Computational Biology, 2016, vol. 12, issue 12, 1-24
Abstract:
Probabilistic inference offers a principled framework for understanding both behaviour and cortical computation. However, two basic and ubiquitous properties of cortical responses seem difficult to reconcile with probabilistic inference: neural activity displays prominent oscillations in response to constant input, and large transient changes in response to stimulus onset. Indeed, cortical models of probabilistic inference have typically either concentrated on tuning curve or receptive field properties and remained agnostic as to the underlying circuit dynamics, or had simplistic dynamics that gave neither oscillations nor transients. Here we show that these dynamical behaviours may in fact be understood as hallmarks of the specific representation and algorithm that the cortex employs to perform probabilistic inference. We demonstrate that a particular family of probabilistic inference algorithms, Hamiltonian Monte Carlo (HMC), naturally maps onto the dynamics of excitatory-inhibitory neural networks. Specifically, we constructed a model of an excitatory-inhibitory circuit in primary visual cortex that performed HMC inference, and thus inherently gave rise to oscillations and transients. These oscillations were not mere epiphenomena but served an important functional role: speeding up inference by rapidly spanning a large volume of state space. Inference thus became an order of magnitude more efficient than in a non-oscillatory variant of the model. In addition, the network matched two specific properties of observed neural dynamics that would otherwise be difficult to account for using probabilistic inference. First, the frequency of oscillations as well as the magnitude of transients increased with the contrast of the image stimulus. Second, excitation and inhibition were balanced, and inhibition lagged excitation. These results suggest a new functional role for the separation of cortical populations into excitatory and inhibitory neurons, and for the neural oscillations that emerge in such excitatory-inhibitory networks: enhancing the efficiency of cortical computations.Author Summary: Our brain operates in the face of substantial uncertainty due to ambiguity in the inputs, and inherent unpredictability in the environment. Behavioural and neural evidence indicates that the brain often uses a close approximation of the optimal strategy, probabilistic inference, to interpret sensory inputs and make decisions under uncertainty. However, the circuit dynamics underlying such probabilistic computations are unknown. In particular, two fundamental properties of cortical responses, the presence of oscillations and transients, are difficult to reconcile with probabilistic inference. We show that excitatory-inhibitory neural networks are naturally suited to implement a particular inference algorithm, Hamiltonian Monte Carlo. Our network showed oscillations and transients like those found in the cortex and took advantage of these dynamical motifs to speed up inference by an order of magnitude. These results suggest a new functional role for the separation of cortical populations into excitatory and inhibitory neurons, and for the neural oscillations that emerge in such excitatory-inhibitory networks: enhancing the efficiency of cortical computations.
Date: 2016
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1005186
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005186
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