Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4934865 Schizophrenia Research 2017 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
Why some individuals, when presented with unstructured sensory inputs, develop altered perceptions not based in reality, is not well understood. Machine learning approaches can potentially help us understand how the brain normally interprets sensory inputs. Artificial neural networks (ANN) progressively extract higher and higher-level features of sensory input and identify the nature of an object based on a priori information. However, some ANNs which use algorithms such as the “deep-dreaming” developed by Google, allow the network to over-emphasize some objects it “thinks” it recognizes in those areas, and iteratively enhance such outputs leading to representations that appear farther and farther from “reality”. We suggest that such “deep dreaming” ANNs may model aberrant salience, a mechanism suggested for pathogenesis of psychosis. Such models can generate testable predictions for psychosis.
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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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