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A Normative Theory of Forgetting: Lessons from the Fruit Fly
Authors:Johanni Brea  Robert Urbanczik  Walter Senn
Affiliation:1.Department of Physiology, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;2.Department of Physiology and Center for Cognition, Learning and Memory, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;Brain and Spine Institute (ICM), France
Abstract:Recent experiments revealed that the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has a dedicated mechanism for forgetting: blocking the G-protein Rac leads to slower and activating Rac to faster forgetting. This active form of forgetting lacks a satisfactory functional explanation. We investigated optimal decision making for an agent adapting to a stochastic environment where a stimulus may switch between being indicative of reward or punishment. Like Drosophila, an optimal agent shows forgetting with a rate that is linked to the time scale of changes in the environment. Moreover, to reduce the odds of missing future reward, an optimal agent may trade the risk of immediate pain for information gain and thus forget faster after aversive conditioning. A simple neuronal network reproduces these features. Our theory shows that forgetting in Drosophila appears as an optimal adaptive behavior in a changing environment. This is in line with the view that forgetting is adaptive rather than a consequence of limitations of the memory system.
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