Brain May Rely On Computer-Like Mechanism to Make Sense of Novel Situations
Sep. 23, 2013 — Our brains
give us the remarkable ability to make sense of situations we've never
encountered before -- a familiar person in an unfamiliar place, for
example, or a coworker in a different job role -- but the mechanism our
brains use to accomplish this has been a longstanding mystery of
neuroscience.
“The fact
that you understand that the sentence is grammatically well formed means
you can process these completely novel inputs,” said Randall O’Reilly, a
professor in CU-Boulder’s Department of Psychology and Neuroscience and
co-author of the study. “But in the past when we’ve tried to get
computer models of a brain to do that, we haven’t been successful.”
(Credit: © Robert Voight / Fotolia)
Now, researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder have
demonstrated that our brains could process these new situations by
relying on a method similar to the "pointer" system used by computers.
"Pointers" are used to tell a computer where to look for information
stored elsewhere in the system to replace a variable.
For the study, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
the research team relied on sentences with words used in unique ways to
test the brain's ability to understand the role familiar words play in a
sentence even when those words are used in unfamiliar, and even
nonsensical, ways.
For example, in the sentence, "I want to desk you," we understand the
word "desk" is being used as a verb even though our past experience
with the word "desk" is as a noun.
"The fact that you understand that the sentence is grammatically well
formed means you can process these completely novel inputs," said
Randall O'Reilly, a professor in CU-Boulder's Department of Psychology
and Neuroscience and co-author of the study. "But in the past when we've
tried to get computer models of a brain to do that, we haven't been
successful."
This shows that human brains are able to understand the sentence as a
structure with variables -- a subject, a verb and often, an object --
and that the brain can assign a wide variety of words to those variables
and still understand the sentence structure. But the way the brain does
this has not been understood.
Computers routinely complete similar tasks. In computer science, for
example, a computer program could create an email form letter that has a
pointer in the greeting line. The pointer would then draw the name
information for each individual recipient into the greeting being sent
to that person.
In the new study, led by Trenton Kriete, a postdoctoral researcher in
O'Reilly's lab, the scientists show that the connections in the brain
between the prefrontal cortex and the basal ganglia could play a similar
role to the pointers used in computer science. The researchers added
new information about how the connections between those two regions of
the brain could work into their model.
The result was that the model could be trained to understand simple
sentences using a select group of words. After the training period, the
researchers fed the model new sentences using familiar words in novel
ways and found that the model could still comprehend the sentence
structure.
While the results show that a pointer-like system could be at play in
the brain, the function is not identical to the system used in computer
science, the scientists said. It's similar to comparing an airplane's
wing and a bird's wing, O'Reilly said. They're both used for flying but
they work differently.
In the brain, for example, the pointer-like system must still be
learned. The brain has to be trained, in this case, to understand
sentences while a computer can be programmed to understand sentences
immediately.
"As your brain learns, it gets better and better at processing these novel kinds of information," O'Reilly said.
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