The long-term, overall goal is to understand the neural bases of mental processes. Though it is probably impossible to underestimate the difficulties that might impede progress toward this goal, if we do not explicitly try to reach it, then progress will be at best random. I have been encouraged to work on this problem because of the complimentary convergence of three disciplines. First, is the increasing incidence over the last 15 years of cognitive theories that use neuron-like elements as building blocks. These theories attempt to model psychophysical-like experiments in human pattern recognition and concept infomration. Often the neuron-like building blocks involve hypothetical properties that are as yet unknown to neuroscientists. Second is work like my own that studies the role of well-defined neural actiovity in associatively based synaptic modification. These studies are able to test microscopically the reasonableness of the hypothesized neural properties. Third is the existence of what are necessarily precisely defined theories of statistical pattern recognition produced by engineers. The mathematical groundwork their theories provide seems eminently suited to provide a rigorous bridge for evaluating cognitive theories and the discoveries of synaptic modification. Because the hypothesized rules of synaptic modification seem to distinguish among the various neural-like cognitive theories and because so little is really known about synaptic modification issues, our studies concentrate on constructing well controlled, easily interpreted experimental situations which allow the comparison of various theories of synaptic modification in a context amenable to both electrophysiological and electron microscopic analysis. The research is a continuation of such studies that identify, as quantitatively as possible, the characteristics of synaptic modification. In addition, I would like to produce theories which better harmonize the cognitive and neural experimental data. I eagerly anticipate increased interactions with experimental cognitive scientists interested in neural-like theories.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Scientist Development Award - Research (K02)
Project #
5K02MH000622-04
Application #
3070013
Study Section
Research Scientist Development Review Committee (MHK)
Project Start
1986-07-01
Project End
1991-06-30
Budget Start
1989-07-01
Budget End
1990-06-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Virginia
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
001910777
City
Charlottesville
State
VA
Country
United States
Zip Code
22904
Desmond, N L; Zhang, D X; Levy, W B (2000) Estradiol enhances the induction of homosynaptic long-term depression in the CA1 region of the adult, ovariectomized rat. Neurobiol Learn Mem 73:180-7
August, D A; Levy, W B (1999) Temporal sequence compression by an integrate-and-fire model of hippocampal area CA3. J Comput Neurosci 6:71-90
Levy, W B; Delic, H; Adelsberger-Mangan, D M (1999) The statistical relationship between connectivity and neural activity in fractionally connected feed-forward networks. Biol Cybern 80:131-9
Wu, Z; Desmond, N L; Levy, W B (1998) Homosynaptic long-term depression of CA3-CA3 synapses in the in vivo hippocampus. Brain Res 789:335-8
Wu, X; Tyrcha, J; Levy, W B (1998) A neural network solution to the transverse patterning problem depends on repetition of the input code. Biol Cybern 79:203-13
Amarasingham, A; Levy, W B (1998) Predicting the distribution of synaptic strengths and cell firing correlations in a self-organizing, sequence prediction model. Neural Comput 10:25-57
Levy, W B; Desmond, N L; Zhang, D X (1998) Perforant path activation modulates the induction of long-term potentiation of the schaffer collateral--hippocampal CA1 response: theoretical and experimental analyses. Learn Mem 4:510-8
Desmond, N L; Levy, W B (1998) Free postsynaptic densities in the hippocampus of the female rat. Neuroreport 9:1975-9
Desmond, N L; Levy, W B (1997) Ovarian steroidal control of connectivity in the female hippocampus: an overview of recent experimental findings and speculations on its functional consequences. Hippocampus 7:239-45
Levy, W B (1996) A sequence predicting CA3 is a flexible associator that learns and uses context to solve hippocampal-like tasks. Hippocampus 6:579-90

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