CVNov 19, 2024

Neuro-3D: Towards 3D Visual Decoding from EEG Signals

arXiv:2411.12248v322 citationsh-index: 5CVPR
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a novel neuroscience task for researchers in brain-computer interfaces and visual perception, though it is incremental as it builds on existing EEG decoding methods.

The paper tackles the problem of decoding 3D visual perception from EEG signals by introducing a new dataset and a framework that reconstructs colored 3D objects with high fidelity, achieving effective neural representations for brain region analysis.

Human's perception of the visual world is shaped by the stereo processing of 3D information. Understanding how the brain perceives and processes 3D visual stimuli in the real world has been a longstanding endeavor in neuroscience. Towards this goal, we introduce a new neuroscience task: decoding 3D visual perception from EEG signals, a neuroimaging technique that enables real-time monitoring of neural dynamics enriched with complex visual cues. To provide the essential benchmark, we first present EEG-3D, a pioneering dataset featuring multimodal analysis data and extensive EEG recordings from 12 subjects viewing 72 categories of 3D objects rendered in both videos and images. Furthermore, we propose Neuro-3D, a 3D visual decoding framework based on EEG signals. This framework adaptively integrates EEG features derived from static and dynamic stimuli to learn complementary and robust neural representations, which are subsequently utilized to recover both the shape and color of 3D objects through the proposed diffusion-based colored point cloud decoder. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to explore EEG-based 3D visual decoding. Experiments indicate that Neuro-3D not only reconstructs colored 3D objects with high fidelity, but also learns effective neural representations that enable insightful brain region analysis. The dataset and associated code will be made publicly available.

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