The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.

Researchers use a variety of behavioral tasks to analyze the effect of biological manipulations on memory function. This research will benefit from a systematic mathematical method for analyzing memory demands in behavioral tasks. In the framework of reinforcement learning theory, these tasks can be...

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Main Authors: Eric A Zilli, Michael E Hasselmo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-07-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2447173?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1c8fcc557bbd4c6bb59e085c80244d3a2020-11-24T22:25:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-07-0137e275610.1371/journal.pone.0002756The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.Eric A ZilliMichael E HasselmoResearchers use a variety of behavioral tasks to analyze the effect of biological manipulations on memory function. This research will benefit from a systematic mathematical method for analyzing memory demands in behavioral tasks. In the framework of reinforcement learning theory, these tasks can be mathematically described as partially-observable Markov decision processes. While a wealth of evidence collected over the past 15 years relates the basal ganglia to the reinforcement learning framework, only recently has much attention been paid to including psychological concepts such as working memory or episodic memory in these models. This paper presents an analysis that provides a quantitative description of memory states sufficient for correct choices at specific decision points. Using information from the mathematical structure of the task descriptions, we derive measures that indicate whether working memory (for one or more cues) or episodic memory can provide strategically useful information to an agent. In particular, the analysis determines which observed states must be maintained in or retrieved from memory to perform these specific tasks. We demonstrate the analysis on three simplified tasks as well as eight more complex memory tasks drawn from the animal and human literature (two alternation tasks, two sequence disambiguation tasks, two non-matching tasks, the 2-back task, and the 1-2-AX task). The results of these analyses agree with results from quantitative simulations of the task reported in previous publications and provide simple indications of the memory demands of the tasks which can require far less computation than a full simulation of the task. This may provide a basis for a quantitative behavioral stoichiometry of memory tasks.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2447173?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric A Zilli
Michael E Hasselmo
spellingShingle Eric A Zilli
Michael E Hasselmo
The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Eric A Zilli
Michael E Hasselmo
author_sort Eric A Zilli
title The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
title_short The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
title_full The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
title_fullStr The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
title_full_unstemmed The influence of Markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
title_sort influence of markov decision process structure on the possible strategic use of working memory and episodic memory.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-07-01
description Researchers use a variety of behavioral tasks to analyze the effect of biological manipulations on memory function. This research will benefit from a systematic mathematical method for analyzing memory demands in behavioral tasks. In the framework of reinforcement learning theory, these tasks can be mathematically described as partially-observable Markov decision processes. While a wealth of evidence collected over the past 15 years relates the basal ganglia to the reinforcement learning framework, only recently has much attention been paid to including psychological concepts such as working memory or episodic memory in these models. This paper presents an analysis that provides a quantitative description of memory states sufficient for correct choices at specific decision points. Using information from the mathematical structure of the task descriptions, we derive measures that indicate whether working memory (for one or more cues) or episodic memory can provide strategically useful information to an agent. In particular, the analysis determines which observed states must be maintained in or retrieved from memory to perform these specific tasks. We demonstrate the analysis on three simplified tasks as well as eight more complex memory tasks drawn from the animal and human literature (two alternation tasks, two sequence disambiguation tasks, two non-matching tasks, the 2-back task, and the 1-2-AX task). The results of these analyses agree with results from quantitative simulations of the task reported in previous publications and provide simple indications of the memory demands of the tasks which can require far less computation than a full simulation of the task. This may provide a basis for a quantitative behavioral stoichiometry of memory tasks.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2447173?pdf=render
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