Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2000, xiv + 359 pp., $29.00, ISBN 0-262-19406-6
The Mind Within the Net was recommended to me by Professor Paul Kieffaber at the College of William & Mary in Virginia. The book provides an excellent review of neural networks and their applications that is both accessible and surprisingly thorough; I highly recommend it.
In The Mind Within the Net, German psychiatrist Manfred Spitzer guides the budding neuroscientist from the basic workings of a single neuron to an intuitive sense for the emergent properties of whole networks. Spitzer takes care to provide crucial background information at each step and each new concept emerges organically out of the previous sections. Yet despite its accessibility the book smoothly tackles many formidable concepts in neuroscience, including:
- mechanisms for selective attention
- declarative and working memory
- information storage in complex networks
- the development of language
The tool-kit contains four basic types of networks:
- Hebbian Learning (Long-Term Potentiation)
- Kohonen networks (center-surround organization)
- Hopfield networks (attractor states)
- Elman networks (recurrent states)
The applications section covers a number of neurological disorders that have been the subject of significant study in recent years: schizophrenia, autism, learning disabilities, phantom limbs, Alzheimer's disease, and depression. In each case Spitzer examines how small changes in the parameters of normal networks can lead to large qualitative changes in the network's function as a whole.
Although the examples Spitzer provides are not intended as definitive etiologies of these diseases, they do give the reader a sense for for how network level disorders manifest and how they are studied.
By working both forward (creating networks that mimic biological structures) and backward (deducing network structure from DSM-IV symptoms) Spitzer successfully argues that neural networks are an integral tool in our quest to better understand the brain.
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