Literature DB >> 33732119

The Thalamus as a Blackboard for Perception and Planning.

Robert Worden1, Max S Bennett2,3, Victorita Neacsu1.   

Abstract

It has been suggested that the thalamus acts as a blackboard, on which the computations of different cortical modules are composed, coordinated, and integrated. This article asks what blackboard role the thalamus might play, and whether that role is consistent with the neuroanatomy of the thalamus. It does so in a context of Bayesian belief updating, expressed as a Free Energy Principle. We suggest that the thalamus-as-a-blackboard offers important questions for research in spatial cognition. Several prominent features of the thalamus-including its lack of olfactory relay function, its lack of internal excitatory connections, its regular and conserved shape, its inhibitory interneurons, triadic synapses, and diffuse cortical connectivity-are consistent with a blackboard role.Different thalamic nuclei may play different blackboard roles: (1) the Pulvinar, through its reciprocal connections to posterior cortical regions, coordinates perceptual inference about "what is where" from multi-sense-data. (2) The Mediodorsal (MD) nucleus, through its connections to the prefrontal cortex, and the other thalamic nuclei linked to the motor cortex, uses the same generative model for planning and learning novel spatial movements. (3) The paraventricular nucleus may compute risk-reward trade-offs. We also propose that as any new movement is practiced a few times, cortico-thalamocortical (CTC) links entrain the corresponding cortico-cortical links, through a process akin to supervised learning. Subsequently, the movement becomes a fast unconscious habit, not requiring the MD nucleus or other thalamic nuclei, and bypassing the thalamic bottleneck.
Copyright © 2021 Worden, Bennett and Neacsu.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bayesian cognition; MD nucleus; blackboard architecture; paraventricular nucleus; pulvinar; spatial steering; supervised learning; thalamus

Year:  2021        PMID: 33732119      PMCID: PMC7956969          DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2021.633872

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci        ISSN: 1662-5153            Impact factor:   3.558


  114 in total

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Journal:  Front Neuroanat       Date:  2010-03-31       Impact factor: 3.856

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Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2013-08-09

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Journal:  J Math Psychol       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 2.223

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Authors:  Anna S Mitchell; David Gaffan
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2008-01-02       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Modeling Visual Exploration in Rhesus Macaques with Bottom-Up Salience and Oculomotor Statistics.

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Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2016-06-30

10.  The graphical brain: Belief propagation and active inference.

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Journal:  Netw Neurosci       Date:  2017-12-31
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