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Contact

For the possibility of internships or lab visits, please contact Mario Senden via mario.senden@maastrichtuniversity.nl


Department of Cognitive Neuroscience

Maastricht University

Oxfordlaan 55
6229EV Maastricht





Department of Cognitive Neuroscience

Maastricht University

Oxfordlaan 55
6229EV Maastricht



Interfering with a memory without erasing its trace


Journal article


Gesa Lange, M. Senden, Alexandra Radermacher, P. Weerd
bioRxiv, 2019

Semantic Scholar DBLP DOI PubMed
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Lange, G., Senden, M., Radermacher, A., & Weerd, P. (2019). Interfering with a memory without erasing its trace. BioRxiv.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Lange, Gesa, M. Senden, Alexandra Radermacher, and P. Weerd. “Interfering with a Memory without Erasing Its Trace.” bioRxiv (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Lange, Gesa, et al. “Interfering with a Memory without Erasing Its Trace.” BioRxiv, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{gesa2019a,
  title = {Interfering with a memory without erasing its trace},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {bioRxiv},
  author = {Lange, Gesa and Senden, M. and Radermacher, Alexandra and Weerd, P.}
}

Abstract

Previous research has shown that performance of a novice skill can be easily interfered with by subsequent training of another skill. We address the open questions whether extensively trained skills show the same vulnerability to interference as novice skills and which memory mechanism regulates interference between expert skills. We developed a recurrent neural network model of V1 able to learn from feedback experienced over the course of a long-term orientation discrimination experiment. After first exposing the model to one discrimination task for 3480 consecutive trials, we assessed how its performance was affected by subsequent training in a second, similar task. Training the second task strongly interfered with the first (highly trained) discrimination skill. The magnitude of interference depended on the relative amounts of training devoted to the different tasks. We used these and other model outcomes as predictions for a perceptual learning experiment in which human participants underwent the same training protocol as our model. Specifically, over the course of three months participants underwent baseline training in one orientation discrimination task for 15 sessions before being trained for 15 sessions on a similar task and finally undergoing another 15 sessions of training on the first task (to assess interference). Across all conditions, the pattern of interference observed empirically closely matched model predictions. According to our model, behavioral interference can be explained by antagonistic changes in neuronal tuning induced by the two tasks. Remarkably, this did not stem from erasing connections due to earlier learning but rather from a reweighting of lateral inhibition.


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