Mapping between fMRI responses to movies and their natural language annotations.

Journal: NeuroImage
Published Date:

Abstract

Several research groups have shown how to map fMRI responses to the meanings of presented stimuli. This paper presents new methods for doing so when only a natural language annotation is available as the description of the stimulus. We study fMRI data gathered from subjects watching an episode of BBCs Sherlock (Chen et al., 2017), and learn bidirectional mappings between fMRI responses and natural language representations. By leveraging data from multiple subjects watching the same movie, we were able to perform scene classification with 72% accuracy (random guessing would give 4%) and scene ranking with average rank in the top 4% (random guessing would give 50%). The key ingredients underlying this high level of performance are (a) the use of the Shared Response Model (SRM) and its variant SRM-ICA (Chen et al., 2015; Zhang et al., 2016) to aggregate fMRI data from multiple subjects, both of which are shown to be superior to standard PCA in producing low-dimensional representations for the tasks in this paper; (b) a sentence embedding technique adapted from the natural language processing (NLP) literature (Arora et al., 2017) that produces semantic vector representation of the annotations; (c) using previous timestep information in the featurization of the predictor data. These optimizations in how we featurize the fMRI data and text annotations provide a substantial improvement in classification performance, relative to standard approaches.

Authors

  • Kiran Vodrahalli
    Princeton University, United States. Electronic address: kiran.vodrahalli@columbia.edu.
  • Po-Hsuan Chen
    Princeton University, United States.
  • Yingyu Liang
    Princeton University, United States.
  • Christopher Baldassano
    Princeton University, United States.
  • Janice Chen
    Johns Hopkins University, United States.
  • Esther Yong
    University of Toronto, United States.
  • Christopher Honey
    Johns Hopkins University, United States.
  • Uri Hasson
    Princeton University, United States.
  • Peter Ramadge
    Princeton University, United States.
  • Kenneth A Norman
    Princeton Neuroscience Institute and Department of Psychology, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA.
  • Sanjeev Arora
    Princeton University, United States.