NENCMar 26, 2018

Deep learning as a tool for neural data analysis: speech classification and cross-frequency coupling in human sensorimotor cortex

arXiv:1803.09807v164 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of analyzing nonlinear neural representations in complex tasks like speech production for neuroscientists, offering a novel tool but with incremental improvements over existing methods.

The researchers tackled the challenge of decoding speech from neural activity in human sensorimotor cortex using deep networks, achieving higher decoding accuracy compared to baseline models and revealing hierarchical latent structure that aligns with articulatory speech control.

A fundamental challenge in neuroscience is to understand what structure in the world is represented in spatially distributed patterns of neural activity from multiple single-trial measurements. This is often accomplished by learning a simple, linear transformations between neural features and features of the sensory stimuli or motor task. While successful in some early sensory processing areas, linear mappings are unlikely to be ideal tools for elucidating nonlinear, hierarchical representations of higher-order brain areas during complex tasks, such as the production of speech by humans. Here, we apply deep networks to predict produced speech syllables from cortical surface electric potentials recorded from human sensorimotor cortex. We found that deep networks had higher decoding prediction accuracy compared to baseline models, and also exhibited greater improvements in accuracy with increasing dataset size. We further demonstrate that deep network's confusions revealed hierarchical latent structure in the neural data, which recapitulated the underlying articulatory nature of speech motor control. Finally, we used deep networks to compare task-relevant information in different neural frequency bands, and found that the high-gamma band contains the vast majority of information relevant for the speech prediction task, with little-to-no additional contribution from lower-frequencies. Together, these results demonstrate the utility of deep networks as a data analysis tool for neuroscience.

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