Brain Inspired

BI 205 Dmitri Chklovskii: Neurons Are Smarter Than You Think


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Since the 1940s and 50s, back at the origins of what we now think of as artificial intelligence, there have been lots of ways of conceiving what it is that brains do, or what the function of the brain is. One of those conceptions, going to back to cybernetics, is that the brain is a controller that operates under the principles of feedback control. This view has been carried down in various forms to us in present day. Also since that same time period, when McCulloch and Pitts suggested that single neurons are logical devices, there have been lots of ways of conceiving what it is that single neurons do. Are they logical operators, do they each represent something special, are they trying to maximize efficiency, for example?

Dmitri Chklovskii, who goes by Mitya, runs the Neural Circuits and Algorithms lab at the Flatiron Institute. Mitya believes that single neurons themselves are each individual controllers. They're smart agents, each trying to predict their inputs, like in predictive processing, but also functioning as an optimal feedback controller. We talk about historical conceptions of the function of single neurons and how this differs, we talk about how to think of single neurons versus populations of neurons, some of the neuroscience findings that seem to support Mitya's account, the control algorithm that simplifies the neuron's otherwise impossible control task, and other various topics.

We also discuss Mitya's early interests, coming from a physics and engineering background, in how to wire up our brains efficiently, given the limited amount of space in our craniums. Obviously evolution produced its own solutions for this problem. This pursuit led Mitya to study the C. elegans worm, because its connectome was nearly complete- actually, Mitya and his team helped complete the connectome so he'd have the whole wiring diagram to study it. So we talk about that work, and what knowing the whole connectome of C. elegans has and has not taught us about how brains work.

  • Chklovskii Lab.
  • Twitter: @chklovskii.
  • Related papers
    • The Neuron as a Direct Data-Driven Controller.
    • Normative and mechanistic model of an adaptive circuit for efficient encoding and feature extraction.
    • Related episodes
      • BI 143 Rodolphe Sepulchre: Mixed Feedback Control
      • BI 119 Henry Yin: The Crisis in Neuroscience
      • Read the transcript.

        0:00 - Intro

        7:34 - Physicists approach for neuroscience
        12:39 - What's missing in AI and neuroscience?
        16:36 - Connectomes
        31:51 - Understanding complex systems
        33:17 - Earliest models of neurons
        39:08 - Smart neurons
        42:56 - Neuron theories that influenced Mitya
        46:50 - Neuron as a controller
        55:03 - How to test the neuron as controller hypothesis
        1:00:29 - Direct data-driven control
        1:11:09 - Experimental evidence
        1:22:25 - Single neuron doctrine and population doctrine
        1:25:30 - Neurons as agents
        1:28:52 - Implications for AI
        1:30:02 - Limits to control perspective

        ...more
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        Brain InspiredBy Paul Middlebrooks

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