» Articles » PMID: 36215307

Structured Random Receptive Fields Enable Informative Sensory Encodings

Overview
Specialty Biology
Date 2022 Oct 10
PMID 36215307
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Brains must represent the outside world so that animals survive and thrive. In early sensory systems, neural populations have diverse receptive fields structured to detect important features in inputs, yet significant variability has been ignored in classical models of sensory neurons. We model neuronal receptive fields as random, variable samples from parameterized distributions and demonstrate this model in two sensory modalities using data from insect mechanosensors and mammalian primary visual cortex. Our approach leads to a significant theoretical connection between the foundational concepts of receptive fields and random features, a leading theory for understanding artificial neural networks. The modeled neurons perform a randomized wavelet transform on inputs, which removes high frequency noise and boosts the signal. Further, these random feature neurons enable learning from fewer training samples and with smaller networks in artificial tasks. This structured random model of receptive fields provides a unifying, mathematically tractable framework to understand sensory encodings across both spatial and temporal domains.

References
1.
Koay S, Charles A, Thiberge S, Brody C, Tank D . Sequential and efficient neural-population coding of complex task information. Neuron. 2021; 110(2):328-349.e11. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.020. View

2.
Paninski L . Convergence properties of three spike-triggered analysis techniques. Network. 2003; 14(3):437-64. View

3.
Stringer C, Pachitariu M, Steinmetz N, Carandini M, Harris K . High-dimensional geometry of population responses in visual cortex. Nature. 2019; 571(7765):361-365. PMC: 6642054. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1346-5. View

4.
Canatar A, Bordelon B, Pehlevan C . Spectral bias and task-model alignment explain generalization in kernel regression and infinitely wide neural networks. Nat Commun. 2021; 12(1):2914. PMC: 8131612. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23103-1. View

5.
Rosenblatt F . The perceptron: a probabilistic model for information storage and organization in the brain. Psychol Rev. 1958; 65(6):386-408. DOI: 10.1037/h0042519. View