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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.encore.com!jbates
- From: jbates@encore.com (John W. Bates)
- Subject: Re: Myelin (Was Re: Spoken Like a True ProLifer)
- Organization: Encore Computer Corporation
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 08:54:38 GMT
- Message-ID: <JBATES.93Jan21035438@pinocchio.encore.com>
- In-Reply-To: sfm@manduca.neurobio.arizona.edu's message of 21 Jan 93 03:44:31 GMT
- References: <1993Jan20.062913.13725@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- <1993Jan21.034431.24481@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- Sender: news@encore.com (Usenet readnews user id)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pinocchio.encore.com
- Lines: 124
-
-
- By the way, I just started catching up on this thread, and noticed
- that earlier Steve provided a reference to the same research I did,
- except he did it much earlier than I did. My apologies for posting
- it again. I could cancel the article, but I don't feel like it. Nyah.
-
- In article <1993Jan21.034431.24481@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu> sfm@manduca.neurobio.arizona.edu (Stephen Matheson) writes:
- > From article <1993Jan20.062913.13725@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>, by
- > mcochran@nyx.cs.du.edu (Mark A. Cochran):
-
- [much deletion.]
-
- >>>>>>>My contention remains: large segments of the nervous system
- >>>>>>>function beautifully without myelin. Myelin has a very
- >>>>>>>specific purpose: it allows for fast conduction of impulses.
- >>>>>>>It must not be indispensible for function, because it is
- >>>>>>>anything but ubiquitous. While it is reasonable to guess that
- >>>>>>>speedy conduction would be advantageous to a complex network,
- >>>>>>>it seems reasonable to assume that one can design a network
- >>>>>>>without it.
-
- >>>>>> Kind of like trying to build a hypercube out of a bunch of
- >>>>>> C=64's? I'm sure it can be done, but would it actually be
- >>>>>> capable of performing any resonable work?
-
- >>>>>Huh? Can you provide some hypercube and C=64 references? :-) Are
- >>>>>they available on request?
-
- >>>> A hypercube (as I understand it, but it's not my field at all) is
- >>>> a bunch of cross-linked multi-processor computers that tries to
- >>>> simulate the neural system by multiple cross-links. The C=64 is
- >>>> the ancient Commodore 64 that people have always laughed about.
- >>>> It would be interesting (funny even) to see what would happen if
- >>>> Commodore got hte idea to try this for real. :)
-
- >>>Wow. Mark is a mrpmsysp UGR futrvits (Mark's occupation has been
- >>>encrypted at his request; decoder available from T.S.A.K.C. BBS)
- >>>*and* a neural network guru. That's amazing.
-
- >> Huh UH! No Way! See right up there where I specifically deny any
- >> expertise in this area? I've read a litle bit, and talked to
- >> people, but no *way* are you goin to get me to play neural network
- >> sysadmin here. ;)
-
- > Very well. You're the one who brought it up. I wonder if John
- > Bates can get enough free time to comment on the applicability of
- > your analogy.
-
- Sorry, Mark, but you've got things a little mixed up. In networking
- lingo, hypercubes are a network designed for supercomputing, with
- a node at each vertex connecting to each neighboring vertex. It's not
- related to neural networks at all. The closest neural network design
- I can think of is James Anderson's "brain state in a box", in which
- each output pattern is a vertex of an n-dimensional box. Nice model
- for associative memory, but n tends to have to be very large (in
- computational terms) for it to be useful.
-
- I've been leary of bringing models into this discussion, since it is
- often hard to relate models of neural networks to actual neural
- networks. But now, let me refer to a model by Stanislas Dehaene and
- Jean-Pierre Changeux, which simulated the performance of human
- infants in Piaget's A not B task. Their results approximated the
- performance of human infants.
-
- The interesting part of the experiment, though, was that they varied
- the amount of "noise" that the network received. At high levels
- of noise, the network performed at the level of a 7-month old infant,
- but at low levels, it performed at the level of a 12-month old infant.
- Noise levels seemed to correspond to the development of myelin in
- the frontal lobes.
- (from the _Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience_ 1:3, S. Dehaene and J.P.
- Changeux, A simple model of prefontal cortex function: delayed
- response tasks)
-
- >>>>>I don't see why an unmyelinated network would be incapable of
- >>>>>performing any reasonable work. I can imagine that it wouldn't
- >>>>>perform as well as the faster network. I can also imagine that
- >>>>>the growing size might make the myelination important (or even
- >>>>>necessary) and that the very small beginning network isn't
- >>>>>myelinated because it doesn't need to be.
-
- I noted in another article that you talked about myelination occurring
- once the axon reached a ceratin diameter, and I wanted to respond to
- that. It seems that two schemes have been developed by nature to deal
- with signal loss and transmission speed in nervous systems, one being
- myelin and the other being increased diameter. It only makes sense that
- once an axon reaches a certain diameter, it should be myelinated (in
- species which use myelin, of course). The squid, as an example of
- an unmyelinated species, has axons that are as large as one millimeter.
- Cross sections are visible to the naked eye.
-
- As far as your statements above go, (just so you don't think I'm
- rambling insanely) you're absolutely right. A small network doesn't
- need myelin to function. Crabs, for example, have axons that are just
- a little bit thicker than humans', and they seem to do well enough.
-
- >>>> The resonable work in question, though, is thought. Just as you
- >>>> can't use a 4 bit 16K RAM computer as an effective file server, I
- >>>> don't see how you cna use the similarly limited abilities ofthe
- >>>> pre-myelinated neural system as a 'thought server'.
-
- >>>I'm reserving my judgment on the matter for a time when we know
- >>>more about all the issues involved. The hypomyelinated mice
- >>>discussed later in the post may be our best window into this issue.
- >>>In the meantime, it must be obvious to everyone reading this thread
- >>>(all 3 of us :-) that neither of us has any clue about whether
- >>>myelin is necessary or not. I think that there is at least a fair
- >>>amount of information on the biological side that suggests that
- >>>myelin is not as central as some claim. On the other hand, your
- >>>arguments about the presumed complexity of the network are
- >>>certainly thought-provoking (there's that smell again...myelin
- >>>burning or something).
-
- Yes. The major problem that we have in modelling brain processes is
- the complexity of the whole thing. I mean, our supercomputers have
- problems with 2-3000 neuron models. Massively parallel systems
- reach the 16-32000 neuron level. How much of the brain is actually
- dedicated to thought? Maybe what, 10^10 neurons?
-
- [the rest is deleted 'cause I'm really tired and I've got to get
- back to work. I thought I had something relevant to say, but I've
- forgotten what it was.]
-
- John
-