DocumentCode :
1519676
Title :
Predicting Visual Stimuli From Self-Induced Actions: An Adaptive Model of a Corollary Discharge Circuit
Author :
Ruesch, Jonas ; Ferreira, Ricardo ; Bernardino, Alexandre
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Syst. & Robot., Super. Tecnico, Lisbon, Portugal
Volume :
4
Issue :
4
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
290
Lastpage :
304
Abstract :
Neural circuits that route motor activity to sensory structures play a fundamental role in perception. Their purpose is to aid basic cognitive processes by integrating knowledge about an organism´s actions and to predict the perceptual consequences of those actions. This work develops a biologically inspired model of a visual stimulus prediction circuit and proposes a mathematical formulation for a computational implementation. We consider an agent with a visual sensory area consisting of an unknown rigid configuration of light-sensitive receptive fields which move with respect to the environment and according to a given number of degrees of freedom. From the agent´s perspective, every movement induces an initially unknown change to the recorded stimulus. In line with evidence collected from studies on ontogenetic development and the plasticity of neural circuits, the proposed model adapts its structure with respect to experienced stimuli collected during the execution of a set of exploratory actions. We discuss the tendency of the proposed model to organize such that the prediction function is built using a particularly sparse feedforward network which requires a minimum amount of wiring and computational operations. We also observe a dualism between the organization of an intermediate layer of the network and the concept of self-similarity.
Keywords :
cognitive systems; feedforward neural nets; adaptive model; cognitive process; corollary discharge circuit; neural circuits; ontogenetic development; plasticity; self-induced actions; sparse feedforward network; visual stimuli prediction; Adaptive systems; Computational modeling; Learning systems; Predictive models; Robot sensing systems; Visualization; Corollary discharge; plasticity; reafference; self-similarity; sparse neural networks; visual stimulus prediction;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Autonomous Mental Development, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1943-0604
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TAMD.2012.2199989
Filename :
6202677
Link To Document :
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