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NN
2002
Springer

Acetylcholine in cortical inference

13 years 4 months ago
Acetylcholine in cortical inference
Acetylcholine (ACh) plays an important role in a wide variety of cognitive tasks, such as perception, selective attention, associative learning, and memory. Extensive experimental and theoretical work in tasks involving learning and memory has suggested that ACh reports on unfamiliarity and controls plasticity and effective network connectivity. Based on these computational and implementational insights, we develop a theory of cholinergic modulation in perceptual inference. We propose that ACh levels reflect the uncertainty associated with topdown information, and have the effect of modulating the interaction between top-down and bottom-up processing in determining the appropriate neural representations for inputs. We illustrate our proposal by means of an hierarchical hidden Markov model, showing that cholinergic modulation of contextual information leads to appropriate perceptual inference. q 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
Angela J. Yu, Peter Dayan
Added 22 Dec 2010
Updated 22 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2002
Where NN
Authors Angela J. Yu, Peter Dayan
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