Expected and Unexpected Uncertainty: ACh and NE in the Neocortex

Abstract

Inference and adaptation in noisy and changing, rich sensory environ- ments are rife with a variety of specific sorts of variability. Experimental and theoretical studies suggest that these different forms of variability play different behavioral, neural and computational roles, and may be reported by different (notably neuromodulatory) systems. Here, we re- fine our previous theory of acetylcholine’s role in cortical inference in the (oxymoronic) terms of expected uncertainty, and advocate a theory for norepinephrine in terms of unexpected uncertainty. We suggest that norepinephrine reports the radical divergence of bottom-up inputs from prevailing top-down interpretations, to influence inference and plasticity. We illustrate this proposal using an adaptive factor analysis model.

Cite

Text

Dayan and Yu. "Expected and Unexpected Uncertainty: ACh and NE in the Neocortex." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2002.

Markdown

[Dayan and Yu. "Expected and Unexpected Uncertainty: ACh and NE in the Neocortex." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2002.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2002/dayan2002neurips-expected/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{dayan2002neurips-expected,
  title     = {{Expected and Unexpected Uncertainty: ACh and NE in the Neocortex}},
  author    = {Dayan, Peter and Yu, Angela J.},
  booktitle = {Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year      = {2002},
  pages     = {173-180},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2002/dayan2002neurips-expected/}
}