Low-dimensional dynamics for working memory and time encoding
Author(s)
Cueva, Christopher J.; Saez, Alex; Marcos, Encarni; Genovesio, Aldo; Jazayeri, Mehrdad; Romo, Ranulfo; Salzman, C. Daniel; Shadlen, Michael N.; Fusi, Stefano; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Our decisions often depend on multiple sensory experiences separated by time delays. The brain can remember these experiences and, simultaneously, estimate the timing between events. To understand the mechanisms underlying working memory and time encoding, we analyze neural activity recorded during delays in four experiments on nonhuman primates. To disambiguate potential mechanisms, we propose two analyses, namely, decoding the passage of time from neural data and computing the cumulative dimensionality of the neural trajectory over time. Time can be decoded with high precision in tasks where timing information is relevant and with lower precision when irrelevant for performing the task. Neural trajectories are always observed to be low-dimensional. In addition, our results further constrain the mechanisms underlying time encoding as we find that the linear “ramping” component of each neuron’s firing rate strongly contributes to the slow timescale variations that make decoding time possible. These constraints rule out working memory models that rely on constant, sustained activity and neural networks with high-dimensional trajectories, like reservoir networks. Instead, recurrent networks trained with backpropagation capture the time-encoding properties and the dimensionality observed in the data.
Date issued
2020-08Department
McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive SciencesJournal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
ISSN
0027-8424
1091-6490