CLAILGSep 17, 2020

Modeling Task Effects on Meaning Representation in the Brain via Zero-Shot MEG Prediction

arXiv:2009.08424v219 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses a fundamental question in neuroscience about task-dependent brain activity during semantic processing, though it is incremental in testing specific hypotheses.

The study tackled the problem of how task influences meaning representation in the brain by predicting MEG recordings as a function of word semantics and task, finding that incorporating task semantics significantly improves prediction accuracy, with improvements occurring 475-550ms after word presentation.

How meaning is represented in the brain is still one of the big open questions in neuroscience. Does a word (e.g., bird) always have the same representation, or does the task under which the word is processed alter its representation (answering "can you eat it?" versus "can it fly?")? The brain activity of subjects who read the same word while performing different semantic tasks has been shown to differ across tasks. However, it is still not understood how the task itself contributes to this difference. In the current work, we study Magnetoencephalography (MEG) brain recordings of participants tasked with answering questions about concrete nouns. We investigate the effect of the task (i.e. the question being asked) on the processing of the concrete noun by predicting the millisecond-resolution MEG recordings as a function of both the semantics of the noun and the task. Using this approach, we test several hypotheses about the task-stimulus interactions by comparing the zero-shot predictions made by these hypotheses for novel tasks and nouns not seen during training. We find that incorporating the task semantics significantly improves the prediction of MEG recordings, across participants. The improvement occurs 475-550ms after the participants first see the word, which corresponds to what is considered to be the ending time of semantic processing for a word. These results suggest that only the end of semantic processing of a word is task-dependent, and pose a challenge for future research to formulate new hypotheses for earlier task effects as a function of the task and stimuli.

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