Abstract:The medial temporal lobe (MTL), a brain region containing the hippocampus and nearby areas, is hypothesized to be an experience-construction system in mammals, supporting both recall and imagination of temporally-extended sequences of events. Such capabilities are also core to many recently proposed ``world models" in the field of AI research. Taking inspiration from this connection, we propose a novel variant, the Dual Stream World Model (DSWM), which learns from high-dimensional observations and dissociates them into context and content streams. DSWM can reliably generate imagined trajectories in novel 2D environments after only a single exposure, outperforming a standard world model. DSWM also learns latent representations which bear a strong resemblance to place cells found in the hippocampus. We show that this representation is useful as a reinforcement learning basis function, and that the generative model can be used to aid the policy learning process using Dyna-like updates.
Abstract:In this work we propose Neuro-Nav, an open-source library for neurally plausible reinforcement learning (RL). RL is among the most common modeling frameworks for studying decision making, learning, and navigation in biological organisms. In utilizing RL, cognitive scientists often handcraft environments and agents to meet the needs of their particular studies. On the other hand, artificial intelligence researchers often struggle to find benchmarks for neurally and biologically plausible representation and behavior (e.g., in decision making or navigation). In order to streamline this process across both fields with transparency and reproducibility, Neuro-Nav offers a set of standardized environments and RL algorithms drawn from canonical behavioral and neural studies in rodents and humans. We demonstrate that the toolkit replicates relevant findings from a number of studies across both cognitive science and RL literatures. We furthermore describe ways in which the library can be extended with novel algorithms (including deep RL) and environments to address future research needs of the field.