4.7 Article

Adaptive filters and internal models: Multilevel description of cerebellar function

Journal

NEURAL NETWORKS
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages 134-149

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neunet.2012.12.005

Keywords

Cerebellum; Internal model; Adaptive control

Funding

  1. European Union Grant (REALNET) [270434 FP7]
  2. European Union Grant on Biomimetic Technology for Vibrissal Active Touch (BIOTACT) [ICT-215910]
  3. EPSRC [EP/1032533/1]
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/I032533/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. EPSRC [EP/I032533/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Cerebellar function is increasingly discussed in terms of engineering schemes for motor control and signal processing that involve internal models. To address the relation between the cerebellum and internal models, we adopt the chip metaphor that has been used to represent the combination of a homogeneous cerebellar cortical microcircuit with individual microzones having unique external connections. This metaphor indicates that identifying the function of a particular cerebellar chip requires knowledge of both the general microcircuit algorithm and the chip's individual connections. Here we use a popular candidate algorithm as embodied in the adaptive filter, which learns to decorrelate its inputs from a reference ('teaching', 'error') signal. This algorithm is computationally powerful enough to be used in a very wide variety of engineering applications. However, the crucial issue is whether the external connectivity required by such applications can be implemented biologically. We argue that some applications appear to be in principle biologically implausible: these include the Smith predictor and Kalman filter (for state estimation), and the feedback-error-learning scheme for adaptive inverse control. However, even for plausible schemes, such as forward models for noise cancellation and novelty-detection, and the recurrent architecture for adaptive inverse control, there is unlikely to be a simple mapping between microzone function and internal model structure. This initial analysis suggests that cerebellar involvement in particular behaviours is therefore unlikely to have a neat classification into categories such as 'forward model'. It is more likely that cerebellar microzones learn a task-specific adaptive-filter operation which combines a number of signal-processing roles. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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