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Neurocognitive science: mind from brain ?

Neurocognitive science: mind from brain ?. Włodzisław Duch Department of Informatics, Nicolaus Copernicus University , Toruń, PL Dep t. of Comp . Science, School of Comp . Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Google: Duch Neurocognitive Days, SWPS , June 200 6.

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Neurocognitive science: mind from brain ?

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  1. Neurocognitive science:mind from brain? Włodzisław Duch Department of Informatics, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Toruń, PL Dept. of Comp. Science, School of Comp. Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Google: Duch Neurocognitive Days, SWPS, June 2006

  2. Cognitive Science The Central Paradox of Cognition: how can the structure and meaning, expressed in symbols and ideas at the mental level, result from numerical processing at the brain level? Very few general laws in psychology (mostly psychophysical). Psycho-logy lost the soul (psyche)? Cognitive science: mixture (syntopy?) of cognitive psychology, neurosciences, AI, linguistics, philosophy of mind, psychophysics, anthropology ... but ... There is no central model of mind in cognitive science & foundations of cognitive sciences are full of philosophical problems (Searle, Chalmers, Nagel, Jacson ...)

  3. Mind the Gap Gap between neuroscience and psychology: cognitive science is at best incoherent mixture of various branches. Is a satisfactory understanding of the mind possible ? Roger Shepard, Toward a universal law of generalization for psychological science (Science, Sept. 1987): “What is required is not more data or more refined data but a different conception of the problem”. • Mind is what the brain does, a potentially conscious subset of brain processes. How to approximate the dynamics of the brain to get satisfactory (geometric?) picture of the mind?

  4. From molecules ... 10-10 m, molecular level: ion channels, synapses, membrane properties, neurochemistry, biophysics, psychopharmacology, mind from molecular perspective (Ira Black)? 10-6 m, single neurons: biophysics, computational neuroscience (CS), compartmental models, spikes, LTP, LTD, neurochemistry & neurophysiology. 10-4 m, small networks: neurodynamics, recurrence, spiking neurons, synchronization, neural code (liquid?), memory effects, multielectrode recordings, neurophysiology, CS. 10-3 m, neural assemblies: cortical columns, multielectrode & large electrode recordings, microcircuits, neurodynamics, neuroscience, CS.

  5. … to behavior. 10-2 m, mesoscopic networks: self-organization, sensory and motor maps, population coding, continuous activity models, mean field theories, brain imaging, EEG, MEG, fMRI. 10-1 m, transcortical networks, large brain structures: simplified models of cortex, limbic structures, subcortical nuclei, integration of functions, concept formation, sensorimotor integration, neuropsychology, computational psychiatry ... And then a miracle happens … 1m, CNS, brain level: intentional behavior, psychology, thinking, reasoning, language, problem solving, symbolic processing, goal oriented knowledge-based systems, AI. Where is psyche, the inner perspective? Lost in translation: networks => finite state automata => behavior Alternative: Platonic model => mental events.

  6. Brain-like computing • I can see, hear and feel only my brain states! Ex: change blindness. • Cognitive processes operate on highly processed sensory data. • Redness, sweetness, itching, pain ... are all physical states of brain tissue. Brain states are physical, spatio-temporal states of neural tissue. In contrast to computer registers, brain states are dynamical, and thus contain in themselves many associations, relations. Inner world is real! Mind is based on relations of brain’s states. Computers and robots do not have an equivalent of such WM.

  7. Static Platonic model: motivation Plato believed in reality of mind, ideal forms recognized by intellect. A useful metaphor: perceived mind content is like a shadow of ideal, real world of objects projected on the wall of a cave. (drawing: Marc Cohen) Real mind objects: shadows of neurodynamics? Neurocognitive science: show how to do it!

  8. Physics and psychology R. Shepard (BBS, 2001): psychological laws should be formulated in appropriate psychological abstract spaces. • Physics - macroscopic properties results from microscopic interactions. • Description of movement - invariant in appropriate spaces: • Euclidean 3D => Galileo transformations; • (3+1) pseudo-Euclidean space => Lorentz x-t transformations; • Riemannian curved space => laws invariant in accelerating frames. • Psychology - behavior, categorization, results from neurodynamics. • Neural networks: microscopic description, too difficult to use. • Find psychological spaces that result from neural dynamics and allow to formulate general behavioral laws.

  9. P-spaces Psychological spaces: K. Lewin, The conceptual representation and the measurement of psychological forces (1938), cognitive dynamic movement in phenomenological space. George Kelly (1955), personal construct psychology (PCP), geometry of psychological spaces as alternative to logic. A complete theory of cognition, action, learning and intention. PCP network, society, journal, software …

  10. P-space definition P-space: region in which we may place and classify elements of our experience, constructed and evolving, „a space without distance”, divided by dichotomies. • P-spacesshould have (Shepard 1957-2001): • minimal dimensionality; • distances that monotonically decrease with increasing similarity. • This may be achieved using multi-dimensional non-metric scaling (MDS), reproducing similarity relations in low-dimensional spaces. • Can one describe the state of mind in similar way?

  11. Laws of generalization Shepard (1987), Universal law of generalization. Tenenbaum, Griffith (2001), Bayesian framework unifying set-theoretic approach (introduced by Tversky 1977) with Shepard ideas. Generalization gradients tend to fall off approximately exponentially with distance in an appropriately scaled psychological space. Distance - from MDS maps of perceived similarity of stimuli. G(D) = probability of response learned to stimulus for D=0, for many visual/auditory tasks, falls exponentially with the distance.

  12. Minds work in low D! Mind uses only those features that are useful to act/decide. The structure of the world is internalized in the brain. • 3 examples of elegant low-D mental principles in vision: • In a 3-D vector space, in which each variation in natural illumination is cancelled by application of its inverse from the three-dimensional linear group of terrestrial transformations of the invariant solar source, color constancy is achieved. • Positions and motions of objects represented as points and connecting geodesic paths in the 6-D manifold (3-D Euclidean group of positions and 3-D rotation of each object) conserve their shapes in the geometrically fullest and simplest way. • Kinds of objects support optimal generalization/categorization when represented as connected regions with shapes determined by Bayesian revision of maximum-entropy priors.

  13. Object recognition Natural object recognition (S. Edelman, 1997) Second-order similarity in low-dimensional (<300) space is sufficient. Population of columns as weak classifiers working in chorus - stacking.

  14. Static Platonic model Newton introduced space-time, arena for physical events. Mind events need psychological spaces. • Goal: integrate neural and behavioral information in one model, create model of mental processes at intermediate level between psychology and neuroscience. • Static version: short-term response properties of the brain, behavioral (sensomotoric) or memory-based (cognitive). • Approach: • simplify neural dynamics, find invariants (attractors), characterize them in psychological spaces; • use behavioral data, represent them in psychological space. • Applications: object recognition, psychophysics, category formation in low-D psychological spaces, case-based reasoning.

  15. How to make static model? From neural responses to stimulus spaces. Bayesian analysis of multielectrode responses (Földiak). P(ri|s), i=1..N computed from multi-electrode measurements The posterior probability P(s|r) = P(stimulus | response) Bayes law: Population analysis: visual object represented as population of column activities. Same for words and abstract objects (evidence from brain imaging).

  16. Semantic memory Autoassociative network, developing internal representations (McClleland-Naughton-O’Reilly, 1995). After training distance relations between different categories are displayed in a dendrogram, showing natural similarities/ clusters. MDS mappings: min S (Rij -rij)2 from internal neural activations; from original data in the P-space - hypercube, dimensions for predicates, ex. robin(x)  {0, 1}; from psychological experiments, similarity matrices; show similar configurations.

  17. Neural distances Activations of groups of neurons presented in activation space define similarity relations in geometrical model.

  18. Similarity between concepts Left: MDS on vectors from neural network. Right: MDS on data from psychological experiments with perceived similarity between animals.

  19. From neurodynamics to P-spaces Modeling input/output relations with some internal parameters. Walter Freeman: model of olfaction in rabbits, 5 types of odors, 5 types of behavior, very complex model in between. Simplified models: H. Liljeström. Attractors of dynamics in high-dimensional space => via fuzzy symbolic dynamics allow to define probability densities (PDF) in feature spaces. Mind objects - created from fuzzy prototypes/exemplars.

  20. More neurodynamics Amit group, 1997-2001, simplified spiking neuron models of column activity during learning. Stage 1: single columns respond to some feature. Stage 2: several columns respond to different features. Stage 3: correlated activity of many columns appears. Formation of new attractors =>formation of mind objects. PDF: p(activity of columns| given presented features)

  21. Category learning Large field, many models. Classical experiments: Shepard, Hovland and Jenkins (1961), replicated by Nosofsky et al. (1994) Problems of increasing complexity; results determined by logical rules. 3 binary-valued dimensions: shape (square/triangle), color (black/white), size (large/small). 4 objects in each of the two categories presented during learning. Type I - categorization using one dimension only. Type II - two dim. are relevant (XOR problem). Types III, IV, and V - intermediate complexity between Type II - VI. All 3 dimensions relevant, "single dimension plus exception" type. Type VI - most complex, 3 dimensions relevant, logic = enumerate stimuli in each of the categories. Difficulty (number of errors made): Type I < II < III ~ IV ~ V < VI

  22. Canonical neurodynamics. What happens in the brain during category learning? Complex neurodynamics <=> simplest, canonical dynamics. For all logical functions one may write corresponding equations. For XOR (type II problems) equations are: Corresponding feature space for relevant dimensions A, B

  23. Inverse based rates Relative frequencies (base rates) of categories are used for classification: if on a list of disease and symptoms disease C associated with (PC, I) symptoms is 3 times more common as R, then symptoms PC => C, I => C (base rate effect). Predictions contrary to the base: inverse base rate effects (Medin, Edelson 1988). Although PC + I + PR => C (60% answers) PC + PR => R (60% answers) Why such answers? Psychological explanations are not convincing. Effects due to the neurodynamics of learning? I am not aware of any dynamical models of such effects.

  24. IBR neurocognitive explanation Psychological explanation: J. Kruschke, Base Rates in Category Learning (1996). PR is attended to because it is a distinct symptom, although PC is more common. Basins of attractors - neurodynamics; PDFs in P-space {C, R, I, PC, PR}. PR + PC activation leads more frequently to R because the basin of attractor for R is deeper. Construct neurodynamics, get PDFs. Unfortunately these processes are in 5D. Prediction: weak effects due to order and timing of presentation (PC, PR) and (PR, PC), due to trapping of the mind state by different attractors.

  25. Learning Point of view Neurocognitive Psychology

  26. Probing Point of view Neurocognitive Psychology

  27. Automatization of actions Learning: initially conscious involvement (large brain areas active) in the end becomes automatic, subconscious, intuitive (well-localized activity). Formation of new resonant states - attractors in brain dynamics during learning => neural models. Reinforcement learning requires observing and evaluating how successful are the actions that the brain has planned and is executing. Relating current performance to memorized episodes of performance requires evaluation + comparison (Gray – subiculum), followed by emotional reactions that provide reinforcement via dopamine release, facilitating rapid learning of specialized neural modules. Working memory is essential to perform such complex task.Errors are painfully conscious, and should be remembered. Conscious experiences provide reinforcement (is this main function of consciousness?); there is no transfer from conscious to subconscious.

  28. Feature Space Mapping Platonic Model: inspiration for FSM (Duch 1994) - neurofuzzy system for modeling PDFs using separable transfer (fuzzy membership) functions. Classification, extraction of logical rules, decision support. Set up (fuzzy) facts explicitly as dense regions in the feature space; Initialize by clusterization - creates rough PDF landscape. Train by tuning adaptive parameters P; novelty criteria allow for creation of new nodes as required. Self-organization of G(X;P) = prototypes of objects in the feature space. Recognition: find local maximum of the F(X;P) function.

  29. Intuitive thinking Question in qualitative physics: if R2increases, R1and Vtare constant, what will happen with current and V1, V2 ? Geometric representation of facts: + increasing, 0 constant, - decreasing. Ohm’s law V=I×R; Kirhoff’s V=V1+V2. True (I-,V-,R0), (I+,V+,R0),false (I+,V-,R0). 5 laws: 3 Ohm’s & 2 Kirhoff’s laws. All laws A=B+C, A=B×C , A-1=B-1+C-1, have identical geometric interpretation! 13 true, 14 false facts; simple P-space, complex neurodynamics.

  30. Intuitive reasoning 5 laws are simultaneously fulfilled, all have the same representation: Question: If R2=+, R1=0and V =0, what can be said about I, V1, V2 ? Find missing value giving F(V=0, R, I,V1, V2, R1=0, R2=+) >0 Suppose that variable X = +, is it possible? Not, if F(V=0, R, I,V1, V2, R1=0, R2=+) =0, i.e. one law is not fulfilled. If nothing is known 111 consistent combinations out of 2187 (5%) exist. Intuitive reasoning, no manipulation of symbols; heuristics: select variable giving unique answer. Soft constraints or semi-quantitative => small |FSM(X)| values.

  31. Platonic mind model Feature detectors/effectors: topographic maps. Objects in long-term memory (parietal, temporal, frontal): local P-spaces. Mind space (working memory, prefrontal, parietal): construction of mind space features/objects using attention mechanisms. Feelings: gradients in the global space.

  32. Language for psychology Precise language, replacing folk psychology, reducible to neurodynamics. Mind state dynamics modeled by gradient dynamics in mind space, „sticking” to PDF maxima, for example: where g(x) controls the „sticking” and (t) is a noise + external forces term. Mind state has inertia and momentum; transition probabilities between mind objects should be fitted to transition prob. between corresponding attractors of neurodynamics (QM-like formalism). Primary mind objects - from sensory data. Secondary mind objects - abstract categories.

  33. Some connections Geometric/dynamical ideas related to mind may be found in many fields: Neuroscience: D. Marr (1970) “probabilistic landscape”. C.H. Anderson, D.C. van Essen (1994): Superior Colliculus PDF maps S. Edelman: “neural spaces”, object recognition, global representation space approximates the Cartesian product of spaces that code object fragments, representation of similarities is sufficient. Psychology: K. Levin, psychological forces. G. Kelly, Personal Construct Psychology. R. Shepard, universal invariant laws. P. Johnson-Laird, mind models. Folk psychology: to put in mind, to have in mind, to keep in mind (mindmap), to make up one's mind, be of one mind ... (space).

  34. More connections AI: problem spaces - reasoning, problem solving, SOAR, ACT-R, little work on continuous mappings (MacLennan) instead of symbols. Engineering: system identification, internal models inferred from input/output observations – this may be done without any parametric assumptions if a number of identical neural modules are used! Philosophy: P. Gärdenfors, conceptual spaces R.F. Port, T.van Gelder, ed. Mind as motion (MIT Press 1995) Linguistics: G. Fauconnier, Mental Spaces (Cambridge U.P. 1994). Mental spaces and non-classical feature spaces. J. Elman, Language as a dynamical system; J. Feldman neural basis; Stream of thoughts, sentence as a trajectory in P-space. Psycholinguistics: T. Landauer, S. Dumais, Latent Semantic Analysis, Psych. Rev. (1997) Semantic for 60 k words corpus requires about 300 dim.

  35. Conclusions Complex neurodynamics => dynamics in P-spaces. Low-dimensional representation of mental events. Is this a good bridge between mind and brain? Psychological interpretations may be illusory! Useful applications of the static Platonic model. Open questions: High-dimensional P-spaces with Finsler geometry needed for visualization of mind events - will such model be still understandable? Mathematical characterization of mind space? Many choices. Challenges: simulations of brains may lead to mind functions, but without conceptual understanding; neurodynamical models => P-spaces for monkey categorization. At the end of the road: physics-like theory of events in mental spaces?

  36. Papers (Google: Duch) W. Duch, Geometryczny model umysłu.Kognitywistyka i Media w Edukacji6 (2002) 199-230 Fizyka umysłu. Postępy Fizyki 53D (2002), 92-103 Brain-inspired conscious computing architecture. Journal of Mind and Behavior 26 (2005) 1-22 Platonic model of mind as an approximation to neurodynamics. In: Brain-like computing and intelligent information systems (Springer, Singapore 1997), chap. 20, pp. 491-512 Computational physics of the mind. Computer Physics Communication 97 (1996) 136-153 From cognitive models to neurofuzzy systems - the mind space approach. Systems Analysis-Modeling-Simulation 24 (1996) 53-65 From brain to mind to consciousness without hard problems, Sympozjum Kognitywne Świadomość a Percepcja. UAM1996 Mind space approach to neurofuzzy systems. In: Proc. of the Japanese Neural Networks Soc. 1994, Tsukuba, Japan, pp. 173-174 Categorization, Prototype Theory and Neural Dynamics. Proc. of the 4th Int. Conf. on Soft Computing 1996, Iizuka, Japan, pp. 482-485

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