What determines the capacity of autoassociative memories in the brain?
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4855350
DOI10.1088/0954-898X/2/4/004zbMath0828.92009OpenAlexW4244066340MaRDI QIDQ4855350
Alessandro Treves, Edmund T. Rolls
Publication date: 9 November 1995
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1088/0954-898x/2/4/004
hippocampusstorageretrievalcortical networksautoassociative memoryHebbian learning rulesdistributions of firing ratesthreshold-linear networks
Learning and adaptive systems in artificial intelligence (68T05) Neural biology (92C20) Neural networks for/in biological studies, artificial life and related topics (92B20)
Related Items (12)
Localized activity profiles and storage capacity of rate-based autoassociative networks ⋮ Optimal firing in sparsely-connected low-activity attractor networks ⋮ The Berkeley Wavelet Transform: A Biologically Inspired Orthogonal Wavelet Transform ⋮ Topological pattern selection in recurrent networks ⋮ Memory States and Transitions between Them in Attractor Neural Networks ⋮ Neuronal selectivity, population sparseness, and ergodicity in the inferior temporal visual cortex ⋮ How Synaptic Release Probability Shapes Neuronal Transmission: Information-Theoretic Analysis in a Cerebellar Granule Cell ⋮ Spatial view cells in the hippocampus, and their idiothetic update based on place and head direction ⋮ Memory Capacities for Synaptic and Structural Plasticity ⋮ Time for retrieval in recurrent associative memories ⋮ Reducing a cortical network to a Potts model yields storage capacity estimates ⋮ Notions of associative memory and sparse coding
This page was built for publication: What determines the capacity of autoassociative memories in the brain?