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Mind in Motion: The utilization of noise in the cognitive process

Pallbo, Robert LU (1997) In Lund University Cognitive Studies 57.
Abstract
The brain is not silent. Even in the absence of stimuli are the neurons activated every now and then in what is called "spontaneous" or "background activity" which provides a noisy background to the operation of the brain. This work shows how this noise can be utilized in the cognitive process. That is, rather than being treated as a nuisance, noise is given a functional role in the brain´s activity. More than this, the role noise is given is a very essential one. In fact, the models presented in this work would not function without it.



The utilization of spontaneous activity is demonstrated in two ways. First, it is shown how this activity can enable new knowledge to be assimilated by the system. This ability is... (More)
The brain is not silent. Even in the absence of stimuli are the neurons activated every now and then in what is called "spontaneous" or "background activity" which provides a noisy background to the operation of the brain. This work shows how this noise can be utilized in the cognitive process. That is, rather than being treated as a nuisance, noise is given a functional role in the brain´s activity. More than this, the role noise is given is a very essential one. In fact, the models presented in this work would not function without it.



The utilization of spontaneous activity is demonstrated in two ways. First, it is shown how this activity can enable new knowledge to be assimilated by the system. This ability is described using a framework of generalised evolution that permits cognition to be considered as an evolutionary process occurring within the life-time of the individual. In this evolutionary view of cognition, the spontaneous activity provides the mechanism of variation. This mechanism of variation is very simple in its nature. Yet, its effects are able to follow the growth of an ever more complex cognitive apparatus as it evolves in the individual mind.



The second demonstration of the utilization of noise is a novel model of how the brain is able to detect visual motion. The utilization of spontaneous activity significantly reduces the complexity of the model compared to traditional approaches. The model presented here makes the basic assumption that motion that are present in the current scene was already detected in the previous scene. That is, all that the model needs to do is to update the previous detection to fit the current scene. To account for the initial detection of a movement, spontaneous activity is utilized. Any motion in the visual scene is assimilated by the process if it harmonises with this background activity. Thus, the operation of the system is dependent on the presence of noise. Just like the case of knowledge acquisition mentioned above, noise is used to assimilate new structures into the system. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Popular Abstract in Swedish

"Tanken i rörelse" handlar dels om hur tanken sätts i rörelse av brus och dels om hur detta brus kan användas av hjärnan för att fånga upp visuell rörelse. Ofta betraktas brus som en störning, men detta arbete försöker visa att brus kan ha en viktig funktion i tankeprocessen. Arbetet vill visa hur våra tankar växer fram ur det bakgrundsbrus som alltid finns i hjärnan i form av spontan aktivitet hos hjärncellerna. En viktig poäng med denna metod är att den ger tankarna stor frihet i sin tillväxt. Bruset styr inte tillväxten utan ger den bara näring, något som gör nya och kreativa tankar möjliga.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Sjölander, Sverre
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
AI, image processing, spontaneous activity, motion detection, knowledge acquisition, homunculus, evolutionary epistemology, evolution, cognition, noise, neural networks, Psychology, Psykologi
in
Lund University Cognitive Studies
volume
57
pages
150 pages
publisher
LUCS, Kungshuset, 222 22 LUND, Sweden
defense location
Carolinasalen
defense date
1997-11-04 13:00:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN: LUHFDA/HFKO-1005-SE
ISSN
1101-8453
ISBN
91-628-2708-1
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c6063164-ce9a-4462-8add-bac85df991a9 (old id 29566)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 17:13:55
date last changed
2019-05-21 20:38:53
@phdthesis{c6063164-ce9a-4462-8add-bac85df991a9,
  abstract     = {{The brain is not silent. Even in the absence of stimuli are the neurons activated every now and then in what is called "spontaneous" or "background activity" which provides a noisy background to the operation of the brain. This work shows how this noise can be utilized in the cognitive process. That is, rather than being treated as a nuisance, noise is given a functional role in the brain´s activity. More than this, the role noise is given is a very essential one. In fact, the models presented in this work would not function without it.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The utilization of spontaneous activity is demonstrated in two ways. First, it is shown how this activity can enable new knowledge to be assimilated by the system. This ability is described using a framework of generalised evolution that permits cognition to be considered as an evolutionary process occurring within the life-time of the individual. In this evolutionary view of cognition, the spontaneous activity provides the mechanism of variation. This mechanism of variation is very simple in its nature. Yet, its effects are able to follow the growth of an ever more complex cognitive apparatus as it evolves in the individual mind.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The second demonstration of the utilization of noise is a novel model of how the brain is able to detect visual motion. The utilization of spontaneous activity significantly reduces the complexity of the model compared to traditional approaches. The model presented here makes the basic assumption that motion that are present in the current scene was already detected in the previous scene. That is, all that the model needs to do is to update the previous detection to fit the current scene. To account for the initial detection of a movement, spontaneous activity is utilized. Any motion in the visual scene is assimilated by the process if it harmonises with this background activity. Thus, the operation of the system is dependent on the presence of noise. Just like the case of knowledge acquisition mentioned above, noise is used to assimilate new structures into the system.}},
  author       = {{Pallbo, Robert}},
  isbn         = {{91-628-2708-1}},
  issn         = {{1101-8453}},
  keywords     = {{AI; image processing; spontaneous activity; motion detection; knowledge acquisition; homunculus; evolutionary epistemology; evolution; cognition; noise; neural networks; Psychology; Psykologi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{LUCS, Kungshuset, 222 22 LUND, Sweden}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{Lund University Cognitive Studies}},
  title        = {{Mind in Motion: The utilization of noise in the cognitive process}},
  volume       = {{57}},
  year         = {{1997}},
}