Histed Mark H
NIMH Intramural Program, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda MD 20892.
ArXiv. 2025 Jan 17:arXiv:2501.10521v1.
Our brains encode many features of the sensory world into memories: we can sing along with songs we have heard before, interpret spoken and written language composed of words we have learned, and recognize faces and objects. Where are these memories stored? Each area of the cerebral cortex has a huge number of local, recurrent, excitatory-excitatory synapses, as many as 500 million per cubic millimeter. Here I review evidence that cortical recurrent connectivity in sensory cortex is a substrate for sensory memories. Evidence suggests that the local recurrent network encodes the structure of natural sensory input, and that it does so via active filtering, transforming network inputs to boost or select those associated with natural sensation. This is a form of predictive processing, in which the cortical recurrent network selectively amplifies some input patterns and attenuates others, and a form of memory.
我们可以跟着以前听过的歌曲一起唱歌,解读由我们学过的单词组成的口语和书面语言,识别面孔和物体。这些记忆存储在哪里?大脑皮层的每个区域都有大量局部、循环、兴奋性-兴奋性突触,每立方毫米多达5亿个。在这里,我回顾了证据,表明感觉皮层中的皮层循环连接是感觉记忆的基础。有证据表明,局部循环网络对自然感觉输入的结构进行编码,并且通过主动过滤来实现,即转换网络输入以增强或选择与自然感觉相关的输入。这是一种预测处理形式,其中皮层循环网络选择性地放大一些输入模式并减弱其他输入模式,也是一种记忆形式。