Loading...

241 | Selective connectivity enhances storage capacity in attractor models of memory function

Theoretical and Computational Neuroscience

Author: Facundo Emina | email: facuemina@gmail.com


Facundo Emina 1°2°, Emilio Kropff

1° Fundación Instituto Leloir – IIBBA/CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina
2° Departamento de Física; FCEN, UBA

Autoassociative neural networks provide a simple model of how memories can be stored through Hebbian synaptic plasticity as retrievable patterns of neural activity. However, their modest theoretical storage capacity has remained a major constraint. We explore the possibility of optimizing network performance by selective connectivity between neurons, that could be implemented in the brain through creation and pruning of synaptic connections. We show through numerical simulations that a reconfiguration of the connectivity matrix can improve the storage capacity of autoassociative networks up to one order of magnitude compared to randomly connected networks. Our results indicate that the signal-reinforcement scenario is not only the best performing but also the most adequate for brain-like highly diluted connectivity. In this scenario, the optimized network tends to select synapses characterized by a high consensus across stored patterns. We also introduced an online algorithm in which the network modifies its connectivity while learning new patterns. We observed that, similarly to what happens in the human brain, creation of connections dominated in an initial stage, followed by a stage characterized by pruning, leading to an equilibrium state that was independent of the initial connectivity of the network. Our results suggest that selective connectivity could be a key component to make attractor networks in the brain viable in terms of storage capacity.