Evidence for a deep, distributed and dynamic code for animacy in human ventral anterior temporal cortex.
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Authors
Lu, Qihong
Shimotake, Akihiro
Kikuchi, Takayuki
Kunieda, Takeharu
Miyamoto, Susumu
Takahashi, Ryosuke
Ikeda, Akio
Matsumoto, Riki
Publication Date
2021-10-27Journal Title
Elife
ISSN
2050-084X
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Volume
10
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Rogers, T. T., Cox, C. R., Lu, Q., Shimotake, A., Kikuchi, T., Kunieda, T., Miyamoto, S., et al. (2021). Evidence for a deep, distributed and dynamic code for animacy in human ventral anterior temporal cortex.. Elife, 10 https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.66276
Description
Funder: European Research Council; Grant(s): GAP: 502670428 - BRAIN2MIND_NEUROCOMP
Abstract
How does the human brain encode semantic information about objects? This paper reconciles two seemingly contradictory views. The first proposes that local neural populations independently encode semantic features; the second, that semantic representations arise as a dynamic distributed code that changes radically with stimulus processing. Combining simulations with a well-known neural network model of semantic memory, multivariate pattern classification, and human electrocorticography, we find that both views are partially correct: information about the animacy of a depicted stimulus is distributed across ventral temporal cortex in a dynamic code possessing feature-like elements posteriorly but with elements that change rapidly and nonlinearly in anterior regions. This pattern is consistent with the view that anterior temporal lobes serve as a deep cross-modal 'hub' in an interactive semantic network, and more generally suggests that tertiary association cortices may adopt dynamic distributed codes difficult to detect with common brain imaging methods.
Keywords
ECOG, cognition, human, mvpa, neural networks, neuroscience, semantic memory, temporal lobe, Adolescent, Adult, Brain Mapping, Electrocorticography, Female, Humans, Male, Memory, Neural Networks, Computer, Temporal Lobe, Young Adult
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MR/R023883/1)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00005/18)
Identifiers
PMC8550752, 34704935
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.66276
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/332184
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