Literature DB >> 33707754

Synaptic plasticity as Bayesian inference.

Alexandre Pouget1,2, Peter E Latham1, Laurence Aitchison3,4, Jannes Jegminat5,6, Jorge Aurelio Menendez1,7, Jean-Pascal Pfister5,6.   

Abstract

Learning, especially rapid learning, is critical for survival. However, learning is hard; a large number of synaptic weights must be set based on noisy, often ambiguous, sensory information. In such a high-noise regime, keeping track of probability distributions over weights is the optimal strategy. Here we hypothesize that synapses take that strategy; in essence, when they estimate weights, they include error bars. They then use that uncertainty to adjust their learning rates, with more uncertain weights having higher learning rates. We also make a second, independent, hypothesis: synapses communicate their uncertainty by linking it to variability in postsynaptic potential size, with more uncertainty leading to more variability. These two hypotheses cast synaptic plasticity as a problem of Bayesian inference, and thus provide a normative view of learning. They generalize known learning rules, offer an explanation for the large variability in the size of postsynaptic potentials and make falsifiable experimental predictions.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33707754     DOI: 10.1038/s41593-021-00809-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Neurosci        ISSN: 1097-6256            Impact factor:   24.884


  34 in total

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