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Computational Models of Basal Ganglia Function

Kenji Doya
May 7, 2009
Running Time: 0:47:09
About the Lecture

About the Lecture

As a mathematical engineer, Kenji Doya approaches the goal of describing the most intricate brain mechanisms from a computational perspective. He constructs models of reinforcement learning involving the networked structures of the basal ganglia. His efforts are captured and expressed quantitatively as probabilities, regressions, and algorithms.

In this presentation, Doya covers basic concepts of reinforcement learning, then surveys the last decade of inquiry into the components of the basal ganglia circuit governing voluntary motion. Among the topics: action values, action candidates, and reward prediction involving the neurotransmitter dopamine; model-free versus model-based learning strategies; and the essential role of serotonin as modulator in the complex information loop.

Doya’s recent research is carried out via robots he calls “cyber rodents.” His dream as an undergraduate was to “build a robot that learns the variety of behaviors on its own.” That is, the computer, not the human engineer, teaches the robot to move. He accomplished this in designing a machine-creature exhibiting emotion-like attributes characterized as “depression,” “impulsivity,” “greed,” and “patience.”

Doya believes the “metaparameters” of reinforcement learning must be “tuned appropriately…Otherwise the performance of your learning is very, very poor.” The iterative process involves three terms -- the reward itself, the expected reward for a new state based on choice of action, and memory of the reward gained in the previous state. In the comparison, any differential greater than zero can be exploited for learning. The tradeoff: “No pain, no gain.”

As research advanced to increasing levels of structural specificity, Doya posited that “there seems to be spatial segregation in the function” of basal ganglia components. Specialization in aspects of reinforcement learning is now seen, for instance, in ventral versus dorsal areas of the striatum.

Differentiation is also found in the cortico-basal ganglia information network: not a simple closed loop, but parallel electrical pathways conducting distinct neural operations. Further, the neuromodulators each have their respective missions. Dopamine encodes the temporal difference error -- the reward learning signal. Acetylcholine affects learning rate through memory updates of actions and rewards. Noradrenaline controls width or randomness of exploration. Serotonin is implicated in “temporal discounting,” evaluating if a given action is worth the expected reward. Doya reminds us that clinically “it is well known that the serotonin function is impaired in the depression patient.”

The system of basal ganglia components and neuromodulators requires dynamic balancing. A delicate interplay determines outcomes for learning, actions, and affective states. Doya’s synthetic models are proxies for human behavior, and his computational framework describing the moving parts ultimately has therapeutic implications for psychiatric and neurological disorders.

    Lecture Details

  • Location: 46-3002

“How different parts of the basal ganglia work for different aspects of reinforcement learning…I think that’s a very important question we have to attack in the coming years.”

Kenji Doya

About the Speaker

About the Speaker

Kenji Doya

Principal Investigator, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Japan

Kenji Doya received B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Tokyo. His studies there culminated in a Ph.D. in Mathematical Engineering in 1991. He is Principal Investigator at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology in Japan, and is affiliated with the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International, heading the Computational Neuroscience Labs.

Doya has concentrated on computational neurobiology to discover and describe through algorithms the molecular mechanisms of the mind. His research examines reinforcement learning, metalearning, sequence learning, neuromodulators, and specialization and integration of brain structures. His laboratory subjects have been birds, monkeys, rats, and robots he calls “cyber rodents.” The past twenty years of Doya’s research activities are documented in more than 100 academic papers. He serves as co-editor-in-chief of Neural Networks, as well as guest editor for other international journals of current neuroscience research.

About the Host

About the Host

McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT

The McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT is led by a team of world-renowned, neuroscientists committed to meeting two great challenges of modern science: understanding how the brain works and discovering new ways to prevent or treat brain disorders. The McGovern Institute was established in 2000 by Patrick J. McGovern and Lore Harp McGovern, who are committed to improving human welfare, communication and understanding through their support for neuroscience research.