“…Moreover, modulation appears to regulate a large variety of behaviors like arousal, attention, reward learning, and memory (HarrisWarrick and Marder, 1991;Hasselmo, 1995;Aston-Jones and Cohen, 2005), resulting in an accordingly large spectrum of dynamics and models that regulate synaptic efficacy, synaptic changes and other neural variables (Hasselmo and Schnell, 1994;Fellous and Linster, 1998;Doya, 2002;Smith et al, 2002;Krichmar, 2008;Cox and Krichmar, 2009). One promising computational aspect of modulation is the possibility of increasing, decreasing or inverting the strength and sign of plasticity (Abbott, 1990;Montague et al, 1996;Florian, 2007;Porr and Wörgötter, 2007;Izhikevich, 2007;Pfeiffer et al, 2010), making neuromodulation particularly suitable for modeling and implementing learning processes (Sporns and Alexander, 2002;Doya, 2002;Doya and Uchibe, 2005;Soula et al, 2005;Farries and Fairhall, 2007;Krichmar, 2008;Cox and Krichmar, 2009). The focus in this study is on this latter role of modulation as a gating mechanism for Hebbian synaptic plasticity.…”