how patterned connections can be set up by self-organization

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How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self- Organization D.J. Willshaw C. Von Der Malsburg

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How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization. D.J. Willshaw C. Von Der Malsburg. Early Visual Pathway. Retinal ganglion cells project to LGN of the Thalamus and optic tectum in midbrain Optic tectum is the primary visual area in lower vertebrates (e.g. frogs, fish). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

D.J. Willshaw

C. Von Der Malsburg

Page 2: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Early Visual Pathway

• Retinal ganglion cells project to LGN of the Thalamus and optic tectum in midbrain

• Optic tectum is the primary visual area in lower vertebrates (e.g. frogs, fish)

Page 3: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Outline

• 2 early hypothesis for map formation– Gradient models– Correlated activity models

• Willshaw and von der Malsburg’s model

• Retinal waves

Page 4: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

How are maps initially formed?

2 possibilities:

• Axons project randomly. Only appropriate connections with congruent activity survive.Paul Weiss

OR

• Chemospecificity Hypothesis. Axons are guided to targets via chemical markers.Roger Sperry

Page 5: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Chemospecificity Hypothesis

• Retinal axons returned to original, maladaptive tectal targets

Page 6: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Gradient Models

• topographic branching results from repulsive ligand gradients

• Growth cones have different densities of ligand receptors

• Multiple ligands create complex branching

Page 7: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Example Ligands

• Ephrin-A family

• boundaries vary

Monschau et al. (1997).

Page 8: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Q: How do maps become fine-tuned?

Page 9: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Q: How do maps become fine-tuned?A: Correlated neural activity

all-to-all connectivity selective connectivity

Input layer neighbors output layer neighbors

tectum

retina

Page 10: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Willshaw & von der Malsburg 1976

• Sperry-type models assume axons seek targets independently using neuron specific labels

• W & vdM’s model uses the lateral connections within input and output layers

• Goal of model is to encode the geometrical proximity of input cells using their correlated neural activity.

Page 11: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

General Structure

•Short range excitatory connections

•Long range inhibitory connections

•Competitive, Hebbian synapses

•Spontaneous activity within input layer

tectum

retina

Page 12: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Equations

Hj* = activity in post-syn cell j

Ai* = state of pre-cell i; 1 if active at time t, 0 otherwise

sij = connection weight i j

ekj = excitatory connection of post-cell k post-cell j

ikj = inhibitory connection of post- cell k post-cell j

Weight update:

Normalization:

M = # pre cellsN = # post cells

Page 13: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Orientation of the map

• orientation of map can be fixed using polarity markers

• bias weights of a small pre-syn region in the desired orienation with a small post-syn region

Page 14: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Mapping results

• Mean coordinates of weighted pre-cells projecting to each post-cell.

• Maps shift to accommodate new cells.

Page 15: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Correlated Firing: Retinal Waves

Feller et al, (1996)

• Segregation of retinal inputs in LGN is complete before birth

• TTX on optic chiasm disrupts segregation, suggests activity dependence

• Spontaneous waves of synchronous RGC firing might organize mapping

Page 16: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Properties of Retinal Waves

• Occur spontaneously

• Appear randomly

• Spread to a limited region: local excitation; global inhibition

Page 17: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Movie Time!

Page 18: How Patterned Connections Can Be Set Up by Self-Organization

Summary

• Retino-tectal maps are initially formed using chemical gradients.

• Correlated activity is used to fine tune connections.

• Exploiting lateral connections allows for more efficient genetic coding versus Sperry type models.

• Retinal waves share many properties of Willshaw and von der Malsburg’s model.