Spiking cerebellar model with multiple plasticity sites reproduces eye blinking classical conditioning

Apr 22, 2015·
A. Antonietti
,
C. Casellato
Jesús Garrido
Jesús Garrido
,
E. D'Angelo
,
A. Pedrocchi
· 0 min read
Abstract
Eye blinking classical conditioning is one of the most extensively studied paradigms related to the cerebellum. In this work we have defined a realistic cerebellar model through the use of artificial spiking neural networks, testing it in computational simulations reproducing the eye blinking classical conditioning in multiple sessions of acquisition and extinction. We used two models: one with only the cortical plasticity and another with three plasticity sites, one plasticity at cortical level and two at nuclear level. We have compared the behavioral outcome of the two different models and proved that the model with a distributed plasticity produces a faster and more stable acquisition of conditioned responses in the reacquisition phase with respect to the single plasticity model. This behavior is explained by the effect of the nuclear plasticities, which have a slow dynamics and can express memory consolidation and savings.
Type
Publication
7th International IEEE/EMBS Conference on Neural Engineering (NER)
publications
Jesús Garrido
Authors
Associate Professor
Jesús Garrido is Associate Professor in the Computer Engineering, Automation and Robotics Department at the University of Granada. Jesús is Principal Investigator at the Applied Computational Neuroscience lab and the Virtual Reality label for Industrial and Scientific facilities (Valeria) lab.