Environmental variability and network structure determine the optimal plasticity mechanisms in embodied agents
The evolutionary balance between innate and learned behaviors is highly intricate, and different organisms have found different solutions to this problem. We hypothesize that the emergence and exact form of learning behaviors is naturally connected with the statistics of environmental fluctuations a...
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Zusammenfassung: | The evolutionary balance between innate and learned behaviors is highly
intricate, and different organisms have found different solutions to this
problem. We hypothesize that the emergence and exact form of learning behaviors
is naturally connected with the statistics of environmental fluctuations and
tasks an organism needs to solve. Here, we study how different aspects of
simulated environments shape an evolved synaptic plasticity rule in static and
moving artificial agents. We demonstrate that environmental fluctuation and
uncertainty control the reliance of artificial organisms on plasticity.
Interestingly, the form of the emerging plasticity rule is additionally
determined by the details of the task the artificial organisms are aiming to
solve. Moreover, we show that co-evolution between static connectivity and
interacting plasticity mechanisms in distinct sub-networks changes the function
and form of the emerging plasticity rules in embodied agents performing a
foraging task. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2303.06734 |