Multitasking and compositionality in brain and in neural networks
- š¤ Speaker: Alexander Rivkind; Ishan Kalburge
- š Date & Time: Tuesday 17 June 2025, 11:00 - 12:30
- š Venue: CBL Seminar Room, Engineering Department, 4th floor Baker building
Abstract
This talk will synthesize findings from two key papers that investigate the modular and compositional nature of neural computation. We will explore two distinct perspectives on how neural networks achieve flexible behavior in multitask settings by reusing learned computational primitives.
First, we will review Ito et al. 2022 (Compositional generalization through abstract representations in human and artificial neural networks), who used fMRI and a highly compositional task to identify abstract representations (i.e. orthogonalization) as a neural substrate for compositional generalization in humans. They demonstrated that pretraining artificial neural networks (ANNs) on basic task āprimitivesā induces similar abstract representations, enabling zero-shot generalization and human-like performance.
Next, weāll turn to the study by Driscoll et al., 2024 (Flexible multitask computation in recurrent networks utilizes shared dynamical motifs.) In this work, the authors show that primitives of neural computationālike attractors and decision boundariesācan arise naturally in a monolithic recurrent neural network, without being explicitly engineered for. Authors support this by locating and tracking attractors in the networkās phase space, clustering tasks based on their neural activity, and demonstrating that simulated ālesionsā selectively disrupt tasks in line with those clusters. We will take a critical look at these findings in our journal club, discussing the methodsā applicability as well as their strengths and limitations.
Series This talk is part of the Computational Neuroscience series.
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Tuesday 17 June 2025, 11:00-12:30