Literature DB >> 34050009

Diversity-enabled sweet spots in layered architectures and speed-accuracy trade-offs in sensorimotor control.

Yorie Nakahira1,2, Quanying Liu2,3, Terrence J Sejnowski4,5, John C Doyle6.   

Abstract

Nervous systems sense, communicate, compute, and actuate movement using distributed components with severe trade-offs in speed, accuracy, sparsity, noise, and saturation. Nevertheless, brains achieve remarkably fast, accurate, and robust control performance due to a highly effective layered control architecture. Here, we introduce a driving task to study how a mountain biker mitigates the immediate disturbance of trail bumps and responds to changes in trail direction. We manipulated the time delays and accuracy of the control input from the wheel as a surrogate for manipulating the characteristics of neurons in the control loop. The observed speed-accuracy trade-offs motivated a theoretical framework consisting of two layers of control loops-a fast, but inaccurate, reflexive layer that corrects for bumps and a slow, but accurate, planning layer that computes the trajectory to follow-each with components having diverse speeds and accuracies within each physical level, such as nerve bundles containing axons with a wide range of sizes. Our model explains why the errors from two control loops are additive and shows how the errors in each control loop can be decomposed into the errors caused by the limited speeds and accuracies of the components. These results demonstrate that an appropriate diversity in the properties of neurons across layers helps to create "diversity-enabled sweet spots," so that both fast and accurate control is achieved using slow or inaccurate components.

Entities:  

Keywords:  distributed control; layered architecture; sensorimotor control; speed–accuracy trade-off; vestibulo-ocular reflex

Year:  2021        PMID: 34050009      PMCID: PMC8179159          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1916367118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  40 in total

1.  Limited control strategies with the loss of vestibular function.

Authors:  Rob Creath; Tim Kiemel; Fay Horak; John J Jeka
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2002-06-13       Impact factor: 1.972

Review 2.  Mechanisms of sound localization in mammals.

Authors:  Benedikt Grothe; Michael Pecka; David McAlpine
Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2010-07       Impact factor: 37.312

3.  Metabolic cost as a unifying principle governing neuronal biophysics.

Authors:  Andrea Hasenstaub; Stephani Otte; Edward Callaway; Terrence J Sejnowski
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-06-23       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Encoding properties of haltere neurons enable motion feature detection in a biological gyroscope.

Authors:  Jessica L Fox; Adrienne L Fairhall; Thomas L Daniel
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-02-03       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Skilled throwers use physics to time ball release to the nearest millisecond.

Authors:  Jon Hore; Sherry Watts
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2011-07-20       Impact factor: 2.714

6.  Risk-aware control.

Authors:  Terence D Sanger
Journal:  Neural Comput       Date:  2014-08-22       Impact factor: 2.026

7.  Reliability of spike timing in neocortical neurons.

Authors:  Z F Mainen; T J Sejnowski
Journal:  Science       Date:  1995-06-09       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 8.  The human stretch reflex and the motor cortex.

Authors:  P B Matthews
Journal:  Trends Neurosci       Date:  1991-03       Impact factor: 13.837

9.  How the optic nerve allocates space, energy capacity, and information.

Authors:  János A Perge; Kristin Koch; Robert Miller; Peter Sterling; Vijay Balasubramanian
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2009-06-17       Impact factor: 6.167

10.  Performance Limitations in Sensorimotor Control: Trade-Offs Between Neural Computation and Accuracy in Tracking Fast Movements.

Authors:  Shreya Saxena; Sridevi V Sarma; Munther Dahleh
Journal:  Neural Comput       Date:  2020-03-18       Impact factor: 2.026

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  1 in total

1.  Layered feedback control overcomes performance trade-off in synthetic biomolecular networks.

Authors:  Chelsea Y Hu; Richard M Murray
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-09-14       Impact factor: 17.694

  1 in total

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