Dissociable forms of repetition priming: A computational model


Autoria(s): Makukhin, Kirill; Bolland, Scott
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Nondeclarative memory and novelty processing in the brain is an actively studied field of neuroscience, and reducing neural activity with repetition of a stimulus (repetition suppression) is a commonly observed phenomenon. Recent findings of an opposite trend specifically, rising activity for unfamiliar stimuli—question the generality of repetition suppression and stir debate over the underlying neural mechanisms. This letter introduces a theory and computational model that extend existing theories and suggests that both trends are, in principle, the rising and falling parts of an inverted U-shaped dependence of activity with respect to stimulus novelty that may naturally emerge in a neural network with Hebbian learning and lateral inhibition. We further demonstrate that the proposed model is sufficient for the simulation of dissociable forms of repetition priming using real-world stimuli. The results of our simulation also suggest that the novelty of stimuli used in neuroscientific research must be assessed in a particularly cautious way. The potential importance of the inverted-U in stimulus processing and its relationship to the acquisition of knowledge and competencies in humans is also discussed

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/88664/

Publicador

MIT Press

Relação

DOI:10.1162/NECO_a_00569

Makukhin, Kirill & Bolland, Scott (2014) Dissociable forms of repetition priming: A computational model. Neural Computation, 26(4), pp. 712-738.

Direitos

© 2014 Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Fonte

QUT Business School

Tipo

Journal Article