SOME MECHANISMS FOR A THEORY OF THE RETICULAR FORMATION.

Abstract

Throughout the life of the vertebrates, the core of the central nervous system, sometimes called the reticular formation, has retained the power to commit the whole animal to one mode of behavior rather than another. Its anatomy, or wiring diagram, is fairly well known, but to date no theory of its circuit action has been proposed that could possibly account for its known performance. Its basic structure is that of a string of similar modules, wide but shallow in computation everywhere, and connected not merely from module to adjacent module, but by long jumpers between distant modules. Analysis of its circuit actions heretofore proposed in terms of finite automata or coupled nonlinear oscillators has failed. A radical set of nonlinear, probabilistic hybrid computer concepts is proposed as a guideline for specifying the operational schemata of the above modules. Using the smallest numbers and greatest simplifications possible, a reticular formation concept consisting of 12 anastomatically-coupled modules stacked in columnar array was arrived at. A simulation test of its behavior shows that despite its 800-line complexity, it still behaves as an integral unit, rolling over from stable mode to stable mode according to abductive logical principles, and as directed by its succession of input 60-tuples. The concept employs the following design strategies: modular focusing of input information; modular decoupling under input changes; modular redundancy of potential command (modules having the most information have the most authority); and recruitment and inhibition around reverberatory loops. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 01, 1967
Accession Number
AD0651207

Entities

People

  • Jay Blum
  • Warren S. Mcculloch
  • William L. Kilmer

Organizations

  • Michigan State University

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Anatomy
  • Brain
  • Central Nervous System
  • Circuits
  • Computers
  • Hybrid Computers
  • Nervous System
  • Simulations
  • Simulators
  • Wiring Diagrams

Readers

  • Mathematical Modeling and Probability Theory.
  • Neuroscience
  • Software Engineering