Biologically Plausible Neural Networks via Evolutionary Dynamics and Dopaminergic PlasticityDownload PDF

Published: 02 Oct 2019, Last Modified: 05 May 2023Real Neurons & Hidden Units @ NeurIPS 2019 PosterReaders: Everyone
Keywords: biological plausibility, dopaminergic plasticity, allele frequency, neural net evolution
Abstract: Artificial neural networks (ANNs) lack in biological plausibility, chiefly because backpropagation requires a variant of plasticity (precise changes of the synaptic weights informed by neural events that occur downstream in the neural circuit) that is profoundly incompatible with the current understanding of the animal brain. Here we propose that backpropagation can happen in evolutionary time, instead of lifetime, in what we call neural net evolution (NNE). In NNE the weights of the links of the neural net are sparse linear functions of the animal’s genes, where each gene has two alleles, 0 and 1. In each generation, a population is generated at random based on current allele frequencies, and it is tested in the learning task through minibatches. The relative performance of the two alleles of each gene is determined, and the allele frequencies are updated via the standard population genetics equations for the weak selection regime. We prove that, under assumptions, NNE succeeds in learning simple labeling functions with high probability, and with polynomially many generations and individuals per generation. NNE is also tested on MNIST with encouraging results. Finally, we explore a further version of biologically plausible ANNs (replacing backprop) inspired by the recent discovery of dopaminergic plasticity.
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