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An adaptive filter model of cerebellar zone C3 as a basis for safe limb control?

Dean, Paul ; Anderson, Sean ; Porrill, John and Jörntell, Henrik LU (2013) In Journal of Physiology 591(22). p.5459-5474
Abstract
The review asks how the adaptive filter model of the cerebellum might be relevant to experimental work on zone C3, one of the most extensively studied regions of cerebellar cortex. As far as features of the cerebellar microcircuit are concerned, the model appears to fit very well with electrophysiological discoveries concerning the importance of molecular layer interneurons and their plasticity, the significance of long-term potentiation and the striking number of silent parallel fibre synapses. Regarding external connectivity and functionality, a key feature of the adaptive filter model is its use of the decorrelation algorithm, which renders it uniquely suited to problems of sensory noise cancellation. However, this capacity can be... (More)
The review asks how the adaptive filter model of the cerebellum might be relevant to experimental work on zone C3, one of the most extensively studied regions of cerebellar cortex. As far as features of the cerebellar microcircuit are concerned, the model appears to fit very well with electrophysiological discoveries concerning the importance of molecular layer interneurons and their plasticity, the significance of long-term potentiation and the striking number of silent parallel fibre synapses. Regarding external connectivity and functionality, a key feature of the adaptive filter model is its use of the decorrelation algorithm, which renders it uniquely suited to problems of sensory noise cancellation. However, this capacity can be extended to the avoidance of sensory interference, by appropriate movements of, for example, the eyes in the vestibulo-ocular reflex. Avoidance becomes particularly important when painful signals are involved, and as the climbing fibre input to zone C3 is extremely responsive to nociceptive stimuli, it is proposed that one function of this zone is the avoidance of pain by, for example, adjusting movements of the body to avoid self-harm. This hypothesis appears consistent with evidence from humans and animals concerning the role of the intermediate cerebellum in classically conditioned withdrawal reflexes, but further experiments focusing on conditioned avoidance are required to test the hypothesis more stringently. The proposed architecture may also be useful for automatic self-adjusting damage avoidance in robots, an important consideration for next generation soft' robots designed to interact with people. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Journal of Physiology
volume
591
issue
22
pages
5459 - 5474
publisher
The Physiological Society
external identifiers
  • wos:000326899800008
  • scopus:84887609584
  • pmid:23836690
ISSN
1469-7793
DOI
10.1113/jphysiol.2013.261545
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d1cacf1e-4804-41d1-9a41-c3600e069bdf (old id 4197983)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:08:05
date last changed
2023-09-02 19:27:49
@article{d1cacf1e-4804-41d1-9a41-c3600e069bdf,
  abstract     = {{The review asks how the adaptive filter model of the cerebellum might be relevant to experimental work on zone C3, one of the most extensively studied regions of cerebellar cortex. As far as features of the cerebellar microcircuit are concerned, the model appears to fit very well with electrophysiological discoveries concerning the importance of molecular layer interneurons and their plasticity, the significance of long-term potentiation and the striking number of silent parallel fibre synapses. Regarding external connectivity and functionality, a key feature of the adaptive filter model is its use of the decorrelation algorithm, which renders it uniquely suited to problems of sensory noise cancellation. However, this capacity can be extended to the avoidance of sensory interference, by appropriate movements of, for example, the eyes in the vestibulo-ocular reflex. Avoidance becomes particularly important when painful signals are involved, and as the climbing fibre input to zone C3 is extremely responsive to nociceptive stimuli, it is proposed that one function of this zone is the avoidance of pain by, for example, adjusting movements of the body to avoid self-harm. This hypothesis appears consistent with evidence from humans and animals concerning the role of the intermediate cerebellum in classically conditioned withdrawal reflexes, but further experiments focusing on conditioned avoidance are required to test the hypothesis more stringently. The proposed architecture may also be useful for automatic self-adjusting damage avoidance in robots, an important consideration for next generation soft' robots designed to interact with people.}},
  author       = {{Dean, Paul and Anderson, Sean and Porrill, John and Jörntell, Henrik}},
  issn         = {{1469-7793}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{22}},
  pages        = {{5459--5474}},
  publisher    = {{The Physiological Society}},
  series       = {{Journal of Physiology}},
  title        = {{An adaptive filter model of cerebellar zone C3 as a basis for safe limb control?}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2013.261545}},
  doi          = {{10.1113/jphysiol.2013.261545}},
  volume       = {{591}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}