Acetylcholine and Learning in a Cortical Associative Memory
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in Neural Computation
- Vol. 5 (1), 32-44
- https://doi.org/10.1162/neco.1993.5.1.32
Abstract
Implementing associative memory function in biologically realistic networks raises difficulties not dealt with in previous associative memory models. In particular, during learning of overlapping input patterns, recall of previously stored patterns can interfere with the learning of new patterns. Most associative memory models avoid this difficulty by ignoring the effect of previously modified connections during learning, thereby clamping activity to the patterns to be learned. Here I propose that the effects of acetylcholine in cortical structures may provide a neuropsychological mechanism for this clamping. Recent brain slice experiments have shown that acetylcholine selectively suppresses excitatory intrinsic fiber synaptic transmission within the olfactory cortex, while leaving excitatory afferent input unaffected. In a computational model of olfactory cortex, this selective suppression, applied during learning, prevents interference from previously stored patterns during the learning of new patterns. Analysis of the model shows that the amount of suppression necessary to prevent interference depends on cortical parameters such as inhibition and the threshold of synaptic modification, as well as input parameters such as the amount of overlap between the patterns being stored.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carbachol depresses synaptic responses in the medial but not the lateral perforant pathBrain Research, 1989
- Alzheimer's Disease: Cell-Specific Pathology Isolates the Hippocampal FormationScience, 1984
- Cognitive and psychological computation with neural modelsIEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 1983
- Neural networks and physical systems with emergent collective computational abilities.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1982
- Synaptic enhancement in fascia dentata: Cooperativity among coactive afferentsBrain Research, 1978