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50 Years Since the Marr, Ito, and Albus Models of the Cerebellum

Mitsuo Kawato, Shogo Ohmae, Huu Hoang, Terry Sanger

2020Neuroscience71 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fifty years have passed since David Marr, Masao Ito, and James Albus proposed seminal models of cerebellar functions. These models share the essential concept that parallel-fiber-Purkinje-cell synapses undergo plastic changes, guided by climbing-fiber activities during sensorimotor learning. However, they differ in several important respects, including holistic versus complementary roles of the cerebellum, pattern recognition versus control as computational objectives, potentiation versus depression of synaptic plasticity, teaching signals versus error signals transmitted by climbing-fibers, sparse expansion coding by granule cells, and cerebellar internal models. In this review, we evaluate different features of the three models based on recent computational and experimental studies. While acknowledging that the three models have greatly advanced our understanding of cerebellar control mechanisms in eye movements and classical conditioning, we propose a new direction for computational frameworks of the cerebellum, that is, hierarchical reinforcement learning with multiple internal models.

Topics & Concepts

CerebellumNeuroscienceParallel fiberClimbing fiberGranule cellClimbingPurkinje cellSynaptic plasticityComputational modelCerebellar cortexMotor learningComputer sciencePsychologyArtificial intelligenceBiologyCentral nervous systemReceptorBiochemistryDentate gyrusEcologyVestibular and auditory disordersVisual perception and processing mechanismsNeural dynamics and brain function
50 Years Since the Marr, Ito, and Albus Models of the Cerebellum | Litcius