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Adult neurogenesis acts as a neural regularizer.

Lina M TranAdam SantoroLulu LiuSheena A JosselynBlake A RichardsPaul W Frankland
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
New neurons are continuously generated in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus throughout adulthood. These new neurons gradually integrate into hippocampal circuits, forming new naive synapses. Viewed from this perspective, these new neurons may represent a significant source of "wiring" noise in hippocampal networks. In machine learning, such noise injection is commonly used as a regularization technique. Regularization techniques help prevent overfitting training data and allow models to generalize learning to new, unseen data. Using a computational modeling approach, here we ask whether a neurogenesis-like process similarly acts as a regularizer, facilitating generalization in a category learning task. In a convolutional neural network (CNN) trained on the CIFAR-10 object recognition dataset, we modeled neurogenesis as a replacement/turnover mechanism, where weights for a randomly chosen small subset of hidden layer neurons were reinitialized to new values as the model learned to categorize 10 different classes of objects. We found that neurogenesis enhanced generalization on unseen test data compared to networks with no neurogenesis. Moreover, neurogenic networks either outperformed or performed similarly to networks with conventional noise injection (i.e., dropout, weight decay, and neural noise). These results suggest that neurogenesis can enhance generalization in hippocampal learning through noise injection, expanding on the roles that neurogenesis may have in cognition.
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