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Biological Networks

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biological networks

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with biological networks across World Wide.
4 curated items4 Seminars
Updated about 3 years ago
4 items · biological networks
4 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Multi-level theory of neural representations in the era of large-scale neural recordings: Task-efficiency, representation geometry, and single neuron properties

SueYeon Chung
NYU/Flatiron
Sep 15, 2022

A central goal in neuroscience is to understand how orchestrated computations in the brain arise from the properties of single neurons and networks of such neurons. Answering this question requires theoretical advances that shine light into the ‘black box’ of representations in neural circuits. In this talk, we will demonstrate theoretical approaches that help describe how cognitive and behavioral task implementations emerge from the structure in neural populations and from biologically plausible neural networks. First, we will introduce an analytic theory that connects geometric structures that arise from neural responses (i.e., neural manifolds) to the neural population’s efficiency in implementing a task. In particular, this theory describes a perceptron’s capacity for linearly classifying object categories based on the underlying neural manifolds’ structural properties. Next, we will describe how such methods can, in fact, open the ‘black box’ of distributed neuronal circuits in a range of experimental neural datasets. In particular, our method overcomes the limitations of traditional dimensionality reduction techniques, as it operates directly on the high-dimensional representations, rather than relying on low-dimensionality assumptions for visualization. Furthermore, this method allows for simultaneous multi-level analysis, by measuring geometric properties in neural population data, and estimating the amount of task information embedded in the same population. These geometric frameworks are general and can be used across different brain areas and task modalities, as demonstrated in the work of ours and others, ranging from the visual cortex to parietal cortex to hippocampus, and from calcium imaging to electrophysiology to fMRI datasets. Finally, we will discuss our recent efforts to fully extend this multi-level description of neural populations, by (1) investigating how single neuron properties shape the representation geometry in early sensory areas, and by (2) understanding how task-efficient neural manifolds emerge in biologically-constrained neural networks. By extending our mathematical toolkit for analyzing representations underlying complex neuronal networks, we hope to contribute to the long-term challenge of understanding the neuronal basis of tasks and behaviors.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Trading Off Performance and Energy in Spiking Networks

Sander Keemink
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour
May 31, 2022

Many engineered and biological systems must trade off performance and energy use, and the brain is no exception. While there are theories on how activity levels are controlled in biological networks through feedback control (homeostasis), it is not clear what the effects on population coding are, and therefore how performance and energy can be traded off. In this talk we will consider this tradeoff in auto-encoding networks, in which there is a clear definition of performance (the coding loss). We first show how SNNs follow a characteristic trade-off curve between activity levels and coding loss, but that standard networks need to be retrained to achieve different tradeoff points. We next formalize this tradeoff with a joint loss function incorporating coding loss (performance) and activity loss (energy use). From this loss we derive a class of spiking networks which coordinates its spiking to minimize both the activity and coding losses -- and as a result can dynamically adjust its coding precision and energy use. The network utilizes several known activity control mechanisms for this --- threshold adaptation and feedback inhibition --- and elucidates their potential function within neural circuits. Using geometric intuition, we demonstrate how these mechanisms regulate coding precision, and thereby performance. Lastly, we consider how these insights could be transferred to trained SNNs. Overall, this work addresses a key energy-coding trade-off which is often overlooked in network studies, expands on our understanding of homeostasis in biological SNNs, as well as provides a clear framework for considering performance and energy use in artificial SNNs.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Interacting synapses stabilise both learning and neuronal dynamics in biological networks

Tim Vogels
IST Austria
Mar 2, 2021

Distinct synapses influence one another when they undergo changes, with unclear consequences for neuronal dynamics and function. Here we show that synapses can interact such that excitatory currents are naturally normalised and balanced by inhibitory inputs. This happens when classical spike-timing dependent synaptic plasticity rules are extended by additional mechanisms that incorporate the influence of neighbouring synaptic currents and regulate the amplitude of efficacy changes accordingly. The resulting control of excitatory plasticity by inhibitory activation, and vice versa, gives rise to quick and long-lasting memories as seen experimentally in receptive field plasticity paradigms. In models with additional dendritic structure, we observe experimentally reported clustering of co-active synapses that depends on initial connectivity and morphology. Finally, in recurrent neural networks, rich and stable dynamics with high input sensitivity emerge, providing transient activity that resembles recordings from the motor cortex. Our model provides a general framework for codependent plasticity that frames individual synaptic modifications in the context of population-wide changes, allowing us to connect micro-level physiology with behavioural phenomena.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

On temporal coding in spiking neural networks with alpha synaptic function

Iulia M. Comsa
Google Research Zürich, Switzerland
Aug 30, 2020

The timing of individual neuronal spikes is essential for biological brains to make fast responses to sensory stimuli. However, conventional artificial neural networks lack the intrinsic temporal coding ability present in biological networks. We propose a spiking neural network model that encodes information in the relative timing of individual neuron spikes. In classification tasks, the output of the network is indicated by the first neuron to spike in the output layer. This temporal coding scheme allows the supervised training of the network with backpropagation, using locally exact derivatives of the postsynaptic spike times with respect to presynaptic spike times. The network operates using a biologically-plausible alpha synaptic transfer function. Additionally, we use trainable synchronisation pulses that provide bias, add flexibility during training and exploit the decay part of the alpha function. We show that such networks can be trained successfully on noisy Boolean logic tasks and on the MNIST dataset encoded in time. The results show that the spiking neural network outperforms comparable spiking models on MNIST and achieves similar quality to fully connected conventional networks with the same architecture. We also find that the spiking network spontaneously discovers two operating regimes, mirroring the accuracy-speed trade-off observed in human decision-making: a slow regime, where a decision is taken after all hidden neurons have spiked and the accuracy is very high, and a fast regime, where a decision is taken very fast but the accuracy is lower. These results demonstrate the computational power of spiking networks with biological characteristics that encode information in the timing of individual neurons. By studying temporal coding in spiking networks, we aim to create building blocks towards energy-efficient and more complex biologically-inspired neural architectures.