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A New Hypothesis for Sleep: Tuning for Criticality

Pearlmutter, Barak A. and Conor J. Houghton, Conor J. (2009) A New Hypothesis for Sleep: Tuning for Criticality. Neural Computation, 21 (6). pp. 1622-1641. ISSN 1530-888X

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Abstract

We propose that the critical function of sleep is to prevent uncontrolled neuronal feedback while allowing rapid responses and prolonged retention of short-term memories. Through learning, the brain is tuned to react optimally to environmental challenges. Optimal behavior often requires rapid responses and the prolonged retention of short-term memories. At a neuronal level, these correspond to recurrent activity in local networks. Unfortunately, when a network exhibits recurrent activity, small changes in the parameters or conditions can lead to runaway oscillations. Thus, the very changes that improve the processing performance of the network can put it at risk of runaway oscillation. To prevent this, stimulus-dependent network changes should be permitted only when there is a margin of safety around the current network parameters. We propose that the essential role of sleep is to establish this margin by exposing the network to a variety of inputs, monitoring for erratic behavior, and adjusting the parameters. When sleep is not possible, an emergency mechanism must come into play, preventing runaway behavior at the expense of processing efficiency. This is tiredness.

Additional Information:Copyright Notice "©2009 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Originally publsihed in Neural Computation." The original publication is available at http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/neco.2009.05-08-787
Keywords:New hypothesis for sleep; Sleep deprivation; Cetaceans and unihemispherical sleep; Hamilton Institute sleep.
Subjects:Science & Engineering > Biology
Science & Engineering > Computer Science
Science & Engineering > Hamilton Institute
Science & Engineering > Mathematics
ID Code:1653
Deposited By:Hamilton Editor
Deposited On:10 Nov 2009 11:10
Journal or Publication Title:Neural Computation
Publisher:MIT Press
Refereed:Yes
URL:http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/neco/21/6

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