NCAICVMar 15, 2025

Brain2Text Decoding Model Reveals the Neural Mechanisms of Visual Semantic Processing

arXiv:2503.22697v2h-index: 1
AI Analysis

This work provides a more interpretable framework for probing neural mechanisms of semantic processing, potentially advancing neuroscience and brain-inspired AI.

The authors tackled the challenge of decoding visual semantic content from fMRI signals by developing a novel deep learning model that generates textual descriptions of viewed images, achieving state-of-the-art performance in semantic decoding.

Decoding sensory experiences from neural activity to reconstruct human-perceived visual stimuli and semantic content remains a challenge in neuroscience and artificial intelligence. Despite notable progress in current brain decoding models, a critical gap still persists in their systematic integration with established neuroscientific theories and the exploration of underlying neural mechanisms. Here, we present a novel framework that directly decodes fMRI signals into textual descriptions of viewed natural images. Our novel deep learning model, trained without visual information, achieves state-of-the-art semantic decoding performance, generating meaningful captions that capture the core semantic content of complex scenes. Neuroanatomical analysis reveals the critical role of higher-level visual cortices, including MT+ complex, ventral stream visual cortex, and inferior parietal cortex, in visual semantic processing. Furthermore, category-specific analysis demonstrates nuanced neural representations for semantic dimensions like animacy and motion. This work provides a more direct and interpretable framework to the brain's semantic decoding, offering a powerful new methodology for probing the neural basis of complex semantic processing, refining the understanding of the distributed semantic network, and potentially developing brain-sinpired language models.

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