A recurrent network model of planning explains hippocampal replay and human behaviorWhen interacting with complex environments, humans can rapidly adapt their behavior to changes in task or context. To facilitate this adaptation, we often spend substantial periods of time contemplating possible futures before acting. For such planning to be rational, the benefits of planning to future behavior must at least compensate for the time spent thinking. Here we capture these features of human behavior by developing a neural network model where not only actions, but also planning, are controlled by prefrontal cortex. This model consists of a meta-reinforcement learning agent augmented with the ability to plan by sampling imagined action sequences drawn from its own policy, which we refer to as 'rollouts'. Our results demonstrate that this agent learns to plan when planning is beneficial, explaining the empirical variability in human thinking times. Additionally, the patterns of policy rollouts employed by the artificial agent closely resemble patterns of rodent hippocampal replays recently recorded in a spatial navigation task, in terms of both their spatial statistics and their relationship to subsequent behavior. Our work provides a new theory of how the brain could implement planning through prefrontal-hippocampal interactions, where hippocampal replays are triggered by - and in turn adaptively affect - prefrontal dynamics.
### Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
www.biorxiv.org
@summerfieldlab Thanks a lot Chris! It was super fun to visit your lab and chat about the work, and it helped us improve it substantially to the current version! (I think/hope)
Now also with a full-fledged tootprint (?) https://neuromatch.social/@KrisJensen/109733085761323307
Attached: 1 image Super excited to share our new work showing that recurrent feedback from hippocampal replays to PFC can implement a form of planning that matches human behavior in a sequential decision making task! https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.01.16.523429v1 with Guillaume Hennequin and Marcelo Mattar (sadly not on Mastodon yet!)
neuromatch.social