Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation

Adaptability and flexibility are some of the most important human characteristics. Learning based on new experiences enables adaptation by changing the structural connectivity of the brain through plasticity mechanisms. But the human brain can also adapt to new tasks and situations in a matter of mi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Finger, Holger Ewald
Other Authors: Prof. Dr. Peter König
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-2017031615634
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record_format oai_dc
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language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Neural Networks
Deep Learning
Binding by Synchrony
Dynamic Coordination
Structural Connectivity
Functional Connectivity
Temporal Coding
Memory Consolidation
54.72 - Künstliche Intelligenz
30.20 - Nichtlineare Dynamik
F.0 - GENERAL
E.4 - CODING AND INFORMATION THEORY
89.75.Fb - Structures and organization in complex systems
ddc:000
ddc:500
ddc:150
spellingShingle Neural Networks
Deep Learning
Binding by Synchrony
Dynamic Coordination
Structural Connectivity
Functional Connectivity
Temporal Coding
Memory Consolidation
54.72 - Künstliche Intelligenz
30.20 - Nichtlineare Dynamik
F.0 - GENERAL
E.4 - CODING AND INFORMATION THEORY
89.75.Fb - Structures and organization in complex systems
ddc:000
ddc:500
ddc:150
Finger, Holger Ewald
Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation
description Adaptability and flexibility are some of the most important human characteristics. Learning based on new experiences enables adaptation by changing the structural connectivity of the brain through plasticity mechanisms. But the human brain can also adapt to new tasks and situations in a matter of milliseconds by dynamic coordination of functional activation. To understand how this flexibility can be achieved in the computations performed by neural networks, we have to understand how the relatively fixed structural backbone interacts with the functional dynamics. In this thesis, I will analyze these interactions between the structural network connectivity and functional activations and their dynamic interactions on different levels of abstraction and spatial and temporal scales. One of the big questions in neuroscience is how functional interactions in the brain can adapt instantly to different tasks while the brain structure remains almost static. To improve our knowledge of the neural mechanisms involved, I will first analyze how dynamics in functional brain activations can be simulated based on the structural brain connectivity obtained with diffusion tensor imaging. In particular, I will show that a dynamic model of functional connectivity in the human cortex is more predictive of empirically measured functional connectivity than a stationary model of functional dynamics. More specifically, the simulations of a coupled oscillator model predict 54\% of the variance in the empirically measured EEG functional connectivity. Hypotheses of temporal coding have been proposed for the computational role of these dynamic oscillatory interactions on fast timescales. These oscillatory interactions play a role in the dynamic coordination between brain areas as well as between cortical columns or individual cells. Here I will extend neural network models, which learn unsupervised from statistics of natural stimuli, with phase variables that allow temporal coding in distributed representations. The analysis shows that synchronization of these phase variables provides a useful mechanism for binding of activated neurons, contextual coding, and figure ground segregation. Importantly, these results could also provide new insights for improvements of deep learning methods for machine learning tasks. The dynamic coordination in neural networks has also large influences on behavior and cognition. In a behavioral experiment, we analyzed multisensory integration between a native and an augmented sense. The participants were blindfolded and had to estimate their rotation angle based on their native vestibular input and the augmented information. Our results show that subjects alternate in the use between these modalities, indicating that subjects dynamically coordinate the information transfer of the involved brain regions. Dynamic coordination is also highly relevant for the consolidation and retrieval of associative memories. In this regard, I investigated the beneficial effects of sleep for memory consolidation in an electroencephalography (EEG) study. Importantly, the results demonstrate that sleep leads to reduced event-related theta and gamma power in the cortical EEG during the retrieval of associative memories, which could indicate the consolidation of information from hippocampal to neocortical networks. This highlights that cognitive flexibility comprises both dynamic organization on fast timescales and structural changes on slow timescales. Overall, the computational and empirical experiments demonstrate how the brain evolved to a system that can flexibly adapt to any situation in a matter of milliseconds. This flexibility in information processing is enabled by an effective interplay between the structure of the neural network, the functional activations, and the dynamic interactions on fast time scales.
author2 Prof. Dr. Peter König
author_facet Prof. Dr. Peter König
Finger, Holger Ewald
author Finger, Holger Ewald
author_sort Finger, Holger Ewald
title Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation
title_short Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation
title_full Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation
title_fullStr Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation
title_full_unstemmed Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation
title_sort information processing in neural networks: learning of structural connectivity and dynamics of functional activation
publishDate 2017
url https://repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-2017031615634
work_keys_str_mv AT fingerholgerewald informationprocessinginneuralnetworkslearningofstructuralconnectivityanddynamicsoffunctionalactivation
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spelling ndltd-uni-osnabrueck.de-oai-repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de-urn-nbn-de-gbv-700-20170316156342020-10-28T17:23:01Z Information Processing in Neural Networks: Learning of Structural Connectivity and Dynamics of Functional Activation Finger, Holger Ewald Prof. Dr. Peter König Prof. Dr. Claus C. Hilgetag Prof. Dr. Gordon Pipa Neural Networks Deep Learning Binding by Synchrony Dynamic Coordination Structural Connectivity Functional Connectivity Temporal Coding Memory Consolidation 54.72 - Künstliche Intelligenz 30.20 - Nichtlineare Dynamik F.0 - GENERAL E.4 - CODING AND INFORMATION THEORY 89.75.Fb - Structures and organization in complex systems ddc:000 ddc:500 ddc:150 Adaptability and flexibility are some of the most important human characteristics. Learning based on new experiences enables adaptation by changing the structural connectivity of the brain through plasticity mechanisms. But the human brain can also adapt to new tasks and situations in a matter of milliseconds by dynamic coordination of functional activation. To understand how this flexibility can be achieved in the computations performed by neural networks, we have to understand how the relatively fixed structural backbone interacts with the functional dynamics. In this thesis, I will analyze these interactions between the structural network connectivity and functional activations and their dynamic interactions on different levels of abstraction and spatial and temporal scales. One of the big questions in neuroscience is how functional interactions in the brain can adapt instantly to different tasks while the brain structure remains almost static. To improve our knowledge of the neural mechanisms involved, I will first analyze how dynamics in functional brain activations can be simulated based on the structural brain connectivity obtained with diffusion tensor imaging. In particular, I will show that a dynamic model of functional connectivity in the human cortex is more predictive of empirically measured functional connectivity than a stationary model of functional dynamics. More specifically, the simulations of a coupled oscillator model predict 54\% of the variance in the empirically measured EEG functional connectivity. Hypotheses of temporal coding have been proposed for the computational role of these dynamic oscillatory interactions on fast timescales. These oscillatory interactions play a role in the dynamic coordination between brain areas as well as between cortical columns or individual cells. Here I will extend neural network models, which learn unsupervised from statistics of natural stimuli, with phase variables that allow temporal coding in distributed representations. The analysis shows that synchronization of these phase variables provides a useful mechanism for binding of activated neurons, contextual coding, and figure ground segregation. Importantly, these results could also provide new insights for improvements of deep learning methods for machine learning tasks. The dynamic coordination in neural networks has also large influences on behavior and cognition. In a behavioral experiment, we analyzed multisensory integration between a native and an augmented sense. The participants were blindfolded and had to estimate their rotation angle based on their native vestibular input and the augmented information. Our results show that subjects alternate in the use between these modalities, indicating that subjects dynamically coordinate the information transfer of the involved brain regions. Dynamic coordination is also highly relevant for the consolidation and retrieval of associative memories. In this regard, I investigated the beneficial effects of sleep for memory consolidation in an electroencephalography (EEG) study. Importantly, the results demonstrate that sleep leads to reduced event-related theta and gamma power in the cortical EEG during the retrieval of associative memories, which could indicate the consolidation of information from hippocampal to neocortical networks. This highlights that cognitive flexibility comprises both dynamic organization on fast timescales and structural changes on slow timescales. Overall, the computational and empirical experiments demonstrate how the brain evolved to a system that can flexibly adapt to any situation in a matter of milliseconds. This flexibility in information processing is enabled by an effective interplay between the structure of the neural network, the functional activations, and the dynamic interactions on fast time scales. 2017-03-16 doc-type:doctoralThesis https://repositorium.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-2017031615634 eng Namensnennung-Keine Bearbeitung 3.0 Unported http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/ application/zip application/pdf