English

Network bottlenecks and task structure control the evolution of interpretable learning rules in a foraging agent

Neurons and Cognition 2024-03-21 v1 Neural and Evolutionary Computing Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems

Abstract

Developing reliable mechanisms for continuous local learning is a central challenge faced by biological and artificial systems. Yet, how the environmental factors and structural constraints on the learning network influence the optimal plasticity mechanisms remains obscure even for simple settings. To elucidate these dependencies, we study meta-learning via evolutionary optimization of simple reward-modulated plasticity rules in embodied agents solving a foraging task. We show that unconstrained meta-learning leads to the emergence of diverse plasticity rules. However, regularization and bottlenecks to the model help reduce this variability, resulting in interpretable rules. Our findings indicate that the meta-learning of plasticity rules is very sensitive to various parameters, with this sensitivity possibly reflected in the learning rules found in biological networks. When included in models, these dependencies can be used to discover potential objective functions and details of biological learning via comparisons with experimental observations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.13649,
  title  = {Network bottlenecks and task structure control the evolution of interpretable learning rules in a foraging agent},
  author = {Emmanouil Giannakakis and Sina Khajehabdollahi and Anna Levina},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.13649},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:27:26.849Z