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A Neurodynamic Account of Spontaneous Behaviour

Overview of attention for article published in PLoS Computational Biology, October 2011
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Title
A Neurodynamic Account of Spontaneous Behaviour
Published in
PLoS Computational Biology, October 2011
DOI 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002221
Pubmed ID
Authors

Jun Namikawa, Ryunosuke Nishimoto, Jun Tani

Abstract

The current article suggests that deterministic chaos self-organized in cortical dynamics could be responsible for the generation of spontaneous action sequences. Recently, various psychological observations have suggested that humans and primates can learn to extract statistical structures hidden in perceptual sequences experienced during active environmental interactions. Although it has been suggested that such statistical structures involve chunking or compositional primitives, their neuronal implementations in brains have not yet been clarified. Therefore, to reconstruct the phenomena, synthetic neuro-robotics experiments were conducted by using a neural network model, which is characterized by a generative model with intentional states and its multiple timescales dynamics. The experimental results showed that the robot successfully learned to imitate tutored behavioral sequence patterns by extracting the underlying transition probability among primitive actions. An analysis revealed that a set of primitive action patterns was embedded in the fast dynamics part, and the chaotic dynamics of spontaneously sequencing these action primitive patterns was structured in the slow dynamics part, provided that the timescale was adequately set for each part. It was also shown that self-organization of this type of functional hierarchy ensured robust action generation by the robot in its interactions with a noisy environment. This article discusses the correspondence of the synthetic experiments with the known hierarchy of the prefrontal cortex, the supplementary motor area, and the primary motor cortex for action generation. We speculate that deterministic dynamical structures organized in the prefrontal cortex could be essential because they can account for the generation of both intentional behaviors of fixed action sequences and spontaneous behaviors of pseudo-stochastic action sequences by the same mechanism.

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Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 115 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Germany 4 3%
Japan 3 3%
Switzerland 2 2%
France 2 2%
United Kingdom 2 2%
Australia 1 <1%
Brazil 1 <1%
Mexico 1 <1%
Italy 1 <1%
Other 2 2%
Unknown 96 83%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 27 23%
Researcher 24 21%
Student > Master 15 13%
Professor 12 10%
Student > Bachelor 8 7%
Other 15 13%
Unknown 14 12%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Computer Science 34 30%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 14 12%
Engineering 11 10%
Neuroscience 10 9%
Psychology 9 8%
Other 20 17%
Unknown 17 15%