Predictive Coding in The Brain
Predictive Coding in The Brain
How much about our interaction with – and experience of – our world can be deduced from basic
principles? This talk reviews recent attempts to understand the self-organised behaviour of embodied
agents, like ourselves, as satisfying basic imperatives for sustained exchanges with the environment.
In brief, one simple driving force appears to explain many aspects of action and perception. This
driving force is the minimisation of surprise or prediction error. In the context of perception, this
corresponds to Bayes-optimal predictive coding that suppresses exteroceptive prediction errors.
In the context of action, motor reflexes can be seen as suppressing proprioceptive prediction errors.
We will look at some of the phenomena that emerge from this scheme, such as hierarchical message
passing in the brain and the ensuing perceptual inference.
.
Overview
Geoffrey Hinton
sensory impressions…
prediction update
prediction error
Minimizing prediction error
sensations – predictions
Prediction error
Action Perception
Change sensations Change predictions
Generative models
what where
A simple hierarchy
Sensory
fluctuations
From models to perception
A simple hierarchy
Generative model
Descending
predictions
ModelPredictive
inversion (inference)
coding
Expectations:
Ascending
prediction errors
Predictions:
Prediction errors:
Canonical microcircuits for predictive coding
Haeusler and Maass: Cereb. Cortex 2006;17:149-162 Bastos et al: Neuron 2012; 76:695-711
David Mumford
Predictive coding with reflexes Action
oculomotor
signals
reflex arc
proprioceptive input
pons
retinal input
Perception
Top-down or backward
predictions
12
10
spectral power
Expectations (deep pyramidal cells) 8
4
Andre Bastos
2
0
0 20 40 60 80 100
0.3 V4 V1
0.25
0.2
0.15 superficial
0.1
0.05
0
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
spectral power
4
2
3
2
deep
1
1
0
0 20 40 60 80 100
frequency (Hz)
0
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
superficial
Nonlinear or modulatory
connections
deep
Predictive coding requires the dual encoding of expectations and errors, with
reciprocal (neuronal) message passing
Visual cortex
Action (EOG)
2
-2
200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400
time (ms)
Visual samples
Posterior belief
5
Conditional expectations 0
Rick Adams
Andre Bastos
Sven Bestmann
Harriet Brown
Jean Daunizeau
Mark Edwards
Xiaosi Gu
Lee Harrison
Stefan Kiebel
James Kilner
Jérémie Mattout
Rosalyn Moran
Will Penny
Lisa Quattrocki Knight
Klaas Stephan
And colleagues:
Andy Clark
Peter Dayan
Jörn Diedrichsen
Paul Fletcher
Pascal Fries
Geoffrey Hinton
James Hopkins
Jakob Hohwy
Henry Kennedy
Paul Verschure
Florentin Wörgötter