Multitasking via baseline control in recurrent neural networks

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Aug 15;120(33):e2304394120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2304394120. Epub 2023 Aug 7.

Abstract

Changes in behavioral state, such as arousal and movements, strongly affect neural activity in sensory areas, and can be modeled as long-range projections regulating the mean and variance of baseline input currents. What are the computational benefits of these baseline modulations? We investigate this question within a brain-inspired framework for reservoir computing, where we vary the quenched baseline inputs to a recurrent neural network with random couplings. We found that baseline modulations control the dynamical phase of the reservoir network, unlocking a vast repertoire of network phases. We uncovered a number of bistable phases exhibiting the simultaneous coexistence of fixed points and chaos, of two fixed points, and of weak and strong chaos. We identified several phenomena, including noise-driven enhancement of chaos and ergodicity breaking; neural hysteresis, whereby transitions across a phase boundary retain the memory of the preceding phase. In each bistable phase, the reservoir performs a different binary decision-making task. Fast switching between different tasks can be controlled by adjusting the baseline input mean and variance. Moreover, we found that the reservoir network achieves optimal memory performance at any first-order phase boundary. In summary, baseline control enables multitasking without any optimization of the network couplings, opening directions for brain-inspired artificial intelligence and providing an interpretation for the ubiquitously observed behavioral modulations of cortical activity.

Keywords: decision-making; mean field theory; multitasking; recurrent neural networks; reservoir computing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Artificial Intelligence*
  • Brain
  • Neural Networks, Computer*