DocumentCode :
3069172
Title :
Origin of error signal to the cerebellum and reinforcement signal to the striatum: an hypothesis
Author :
Dufosse, M.
Author_Institution :
Lab. CREARE, INSERM, Univ. Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris
fYear :
1995
fDate :
20-23 Sep 1995
Firstpage :
115
Lastpage :
120
Abstract :
Movement commands are learned by a network which links three subsystems together: a cerebral subsystem which can learn a goal, and two additional subsystems involved in the two concepts of control augmentation and the stabilization augmentation. The subcortico-cerebral mechanism proposed selects the target pyramidal cells of both cerebellar and striatal networks, produces the cerebellar motor error correction or the strital-origin cerebral reinforcement, reduces the cerebellar error signal or increases the dopamine reinforcing signal. Within this frame, no hardware is needed. Any olivary afference having a negative perceptual significance to the global body scheme, may be considered as a possible cerebellar error signal. Central or peripheral signals topographically project to the inferior olive and then to related cerebellar cortical beams, and further to their learned cerebral targets. During a later cerebellar learning phase, sprouting mechanism will directly select the rubral targets, sending rubrospinal commands. Any dopamine-nigral afference, issued having a positive perceptual significance, may be considered as a possible striatal reinforcing signal
Keywords :
biocontrol; brain models; neural nets; neurophysiology; stability; central signals; cerebellar cortical beams; cerebellar motor error correction; control augmentation; dopamine reinforcing signal; dopamine-nigral afference; error signal; inferior olive; movement commands; negative perceptual significance; olivary afference; peripheral signals; reinforcement signal; rubrospinal commands; sprouting mechanism; stabilization augmentation; striatum; strital-origin cerebral reinforcement; subcortico-cerebral mechanism; target pyramidal cells; topographic projection; Associative memory; Basal ganglia; Central Processing Unit; Cerebral cortex; Control theory; Error correction; Information processing; Neural networks; Neurons; Signal processing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Neuroinformatics and Neurocomputers, 1995., Second International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Rostov on Don
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2512-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISNINC.1995.480844
Filename :
480844
Link To Document :
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