TopicNeuro

recurrent dynamics

3 Seminars1 ePoster

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Parametric control of flexible timing through low-dimensional neural manifolds

Manuel Beiran
Center for Theoretical Neuroscience, Columbia University & Rajan lab, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Mar 9, 2022

Biological brains possess an exceptional ability to infer relevant behavioral responses to a wide range of stimuli from only a few examples. This capacity to generalize beyond the training set has been proven particularly challenging to realize in artificial systems. How neural processes enable this capacity to extrapolate to novel stimuli is a fundamental open question. A prominent but underexplored hypothesis suggests that generalization is facilitated by a low-dimensional organization of collective neural activity, yet evidence for the underlying neural mechanisms remains wanting. Combining network modeling, theory and neural data analysis, we tested this hypothesis in the framework of flexible timing tasks, which rely on the interplay between inputs and recurrent dynamics. We first trained recurrent neural networks on a set of timing tasks while minimizing the dimensionality of neural activity by imposing low-rank constraints on the connectivity, and compared the performance and generalization capabilities with networks trained without any constraint. We then examined the trained networks, characterized the dynamical mechanisms underlying the computations, and verified their predictions in neural recordings. Our key finding is that low-dimensional dynamics strongly increases the ability to extrapolate to inputs outside of the range used in training. Critically, this capacity to generalize relies on controlling the low-dimensional dynamics by a parametric contextual input. We found that this parametric control of extrapolation was based on a mechanism where tonic inputs modulate the dynamics along non-linear manifolds in activity space while preserving their geometry. Comparisons with neural recordings in the dorsomedial frontal cortex of macaque monkeys performing flexible timing tasks confirmed the geometric and dynamical signatures of this mechanism. Altogether, our results tie together a number of previous experimental findings and suggest that the low-dimensional organization of neural dynamics plays a central role in generalizable behaviors.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Taming chaos in neural circuits

Rainer Engelken
Columbia University
Feb 23, 2022

Neural circuits exhibit complex activity patterns, both spontaneously and in response to external stimuli. Information encoding and learning in neural circuits depend on the ability of time-varying stimuli to control spontaneous network activity. In particular, variability arising from the sensitivity to initial conditions of recurrent cortical circuits can limit the information conveyed about the sensory input. Spiking and firing rate network models can exhibit such sensitivity to initial conditions that are reflected in their dynamic entropy rate and attractor dimensionality computed from their full Lyapunov spectrum. I will show how chaos in both spiking and rate networks depends on biophysical properties of neurons and the statistics of time-varying stimuli. In spiking networks, increasing the input rate or coupling strength aids in controlling the driven target circuit, which is reflected in both a reduced trial-to-trial variability and a decreased dynamic entropy rate. With sufficiently strong input, a transition towards complete network state control occurs. Surprisingly, this transition does not coincide with the transition from chaos to stability but occurs at even larger values of external input strength. Controllability of spiking activity is facilitated when neurons in the target circuit have a sharp spike onset, thus a high speed by which neurons launch into the action potential. I will also discuss chaos and controllability in firing-rate networks in the balanced state. For these, external control of recurrent dynamics strongly depends on correlations in the input. This phenomenon was studied with a non-stationary dynamic mean-field theory that determines how the activity statistics and the largest Lyapunov exponent depend on frequency and amplitude of the input, recurrent coupling strength, and network size. This shows that uncorrelated inputs facilitate learning in balanced networks. The results highlight the potential of Lyapunov spectrum analysis as a diagnostic for machine learning applications of recurrent networks. They are also relevant in light of recent advances in optogenetics that allow for time-dependent stimulation of a select population of neurons.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Residual population dynamics as a window into neural computation

Valerio Mante
ETH Zurich
Dec 4, 2020

Neural activity in frontal and motor cortices can be considered to be the manifestation of a dynamical system implemented by large neural populations in recurrently connected networks. The computations emerging from such population-level dynamics reflect the interaction between external inputs into a network and its internal, recurrent dynamics. Isolating these two contributions in experimentally recorded neural activity, however, is challenging, limiting the resulting insights into neural computations. I will present an approach to addressing this challenge based on response residuals, i.e. variability in the population trajectory across repetitions of the same task condition. A complete characterization of residual dynamics is well-suited to systematically compare computations across brain areas and tasks, and leads to quantitative predictions about the consequences of small, arbitrary causal perturbations.

ePosterNeuroscience

Distinct timescales of recurrent dynamics in frontal and visual cortices

Jose Ernesto Canton-Josh, Lyn Ackert-Smith, Renan Costa, Lucas Pinto

COSYNE 2025

recurrent dynamics coverage

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ePoster1
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