AUTHOR=Kurikawa Tomoki , Kaneko Kunihiko TITLE=Multiple-Timescale Neural Networks: Generation of History-Dependent Sequences and Inference Through Autonomous Bifurcations JOURNAL=Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience VOLUME=15 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/computational-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fncom.2021.743537 DOI=10.3389/fncom.2021.743537 ISSN=1662-5188 ABSTRACT=

Sequential transitions between metastable states are ubiquitously observed in the neural system and underlying various cognitive functions such as perception and decision making. Although a number of studies with asymmetric Hebbian connectivity have investigated how such sequences are generated, the focused sequences are simple Markov ones. On the other hand, fine recurrent neural networks trained with supervised machine learning methods can generate complex non-Markov sequences, but these sequences are vulnerable against perturbations and such learning methods are biologically implausible. How stable and complex sequences are generated in the neural system still remains unclear. We have developed a neural network with fast and slow dynamics, which are inspired by the hierarchy of timescales on neural activities in the cortex. The slow dynamics store the history of inputs and outputs and affect the fast dynamics depending on the stored history. We show that the learning rule that requires only local information can form the network generating the complex and robust sequences in the fast dynamics. The slow dynamics work as bifurcation parameters for the fast one, wherein they stabilize the next pattern of the sequence before the current pattern is destabilized depending on the previous patterns. This co-existence period leads to the stable transition between the current and the next pattern in the non-Markov sequence. We further find that timescale balance is critical to the co-existence period. Our study provides a novel mechanism generating robust complex sequences with multiple timescales. Considering the multiple timescales are widely observed, the mechanism advances our understanding of temporal processing in the neural system.