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Evolution of the Brain

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Revision as of 17:41, 26 January 2025 by Rob (talk | contribs)

600m ya - Bilaterians and Steering

Valence

  • Bilaterians are the only animals that have brains
  • Nematodes (legless wormlike creatures about the size of a grain of rice) emerge in the Edicaran period from 635 to 539m ya.
  • Brain had 302 neurons (against 85 billion today
  • Initial steering is obtained through assessing the valence (goodness or badness) of a stimulus, and going towards the things that smelled good and away from the things that smelled bad.
  • There were negative and positive valence sensing neurons and move forward neurons and turning neurons.
  • The various sensory inputs acted as votes for going one way or another and the first brains evolved as a mega-integration place to take in all these votes and then decide who had won and thus where to steer.

Emotions

  • Affect is the name for the unifying foundation of emotions
  • In addition to valance (good or bad), there is arousal (high or low)
  • A primitive good mood encourages feeding, digesting, and sexual activity
  • A primitive bad mood inhibits these activities
  • An aroused good mood leads to exploiting nearby food sources or sexual partners
  • An aroused bad mood leads to escaping from bad feelings - hunger, fear
  • The brain generates affective states using neuromodulators like dopanmine and serotonin.
  • In the nematode, dopamine is released to create arousal and drive the search for food and serotonin is released to suppress arousal and drive the enjoyment of digesting it.
  • Dopamine is less about liking things and more about wanting them.
  • Other neuromodulators - norepinephrine, octopamine, and epinephrine drive escape behavior by suppressing the effectiveness of serotonin and stopping an animal from being able to rest and feel safe - acute stress response.
  • Opioids initiate recovery processes and inhibit negative valence neurons to stop and recover from stress episodes.
  • Chronic stress turns off arousal and motivation, activates serotonin and leads to numbness and depression (anhedonia). It can cause learned helplessness
  • Affect answers two questions:
    • Do I want to expend energy by moving?
    • Do I want to stay here or leave?

Associating, Predicting, Learning

  • The digestive organs are under the control of the nervous system
  • Conditional reactions are involuntary associations - associative learning happens automatically without conscious involvement.
  • At the same time as valence, the ability to use experience to change what is considered good and bad also emerges.
  • Learning in biological brains has always been continual.
  • Pavlov’s conditional reflexes are always strengthening (acquisition) or weakening (extinction) with each new experience. Extinction may be followed by spontaneous recovery (instantaneous) or reacquisition (faster than first time)
  • Spontaneous recovery is a primitive form of long-term memory.
  • The credit assignment problem - which cue really predicted something subsequently happening?:
    • Eligibility traces - Immediately follows cue
    • Overshadowing - Pick strongest cue
    • Latent inhibition - Pick the cue you haven’t seen before.
    • Blocking - Use existing cues and ignore others.
  • Learning occurs when synapses change strength or when new ones are formed or old ones are removed.
  • Association, prediction, and learning emerged to tweak the goodness and badness of things

500m ya - Vertebrates and Reinforcing

The Cambrian Explosion

Temporal Distance Learning

Pattern Recognition

Curiosity

Modeling the World

200m ya - Mammals and Simulation

Neural Dark Ages

Generative Models and the Neocortex

Imagination

Model-Based Reinforcement Learning

The Secret to Dishwashing Robots

15m ya - Primates and Metathinking

Political Savvy

Modeling Other Minds

Tools, Teaching, and Imitation

Modeling the Future

100k ya - Humans and Speech

The Search for Human Uniqueness

Language in the Brain

The Perfect Storm

ChatGPT