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(Neural Computation. 2002;14:2371-2396.)
© 2002 The MIT Press


Letter

Hebbian Imprinting and Retrieval in Oscillatory Neural Networks

Silvia Scarpetta

silvia{at}sa.infn.it, Department of Physics "E. R. Caianiello," Salerno University, Baronissi (SA), Italy, and INFM, Sezione di Salerno (SA), Italy

L. Zhaoping

zhaoping{at}gatsby.ucl.ac.uk, Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, UCL, London, U.K.

John Hertz

hertz{at}nordita.uk, Nordita, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark

We introduce a model of generalized Hebbian learning and retrieval in oscillatory neural networks modeling cortical areas such as hippocampus and olfactory cortex. Recent experiments have shown that synaptic plasticity depends on spike timing, especially on synapses from excitatory pyramidal cells, in hippocampus, and in sensory and cerebellar cortex. Here we study how such plasticity can be used to form memories and input representations when the neural dynamics are oscillatory, as is common in the brain (particularly in the hippocampus and olfactory cortex). Learning is assumed to occur in a phase of neural plasticity, in which the network is clamped to external teaching signals. By suitable manipulation of the nonlinearity of the neurons or the oscillation frequencies during learning, the model can be made, in a retrieval phase, either to categorize new inputs or to map them, in a continuous fashion, onto the space spanned by the imprinted patterns. We identify the first of these possibilities with the function of olfactory cortex and the second with the observed response characteristics of place cells in hippocampus. We investigate both kinds of networks analytically and by computer simulations, and we link the models with experimental findings, exploring, in particular, how the spike timing dependence of the synaptic plasticity constrains the computational function of the network and vice versa.







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Copyright © 2002 by The MIT Press.