CVAIFeb 25

SemVideo: Reconstructs What You Watch from Brain Activity via Hierarchical Semantic Guidance

arXiv:2602.21819v1h-index: 16
Originality Highly original
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This work addresses the problem of reconstructing videos from brain activity for neuroscience and brain-computer interface applications, representing an incremental advance with a novel method for known bottlenecks.

The paper tackles the challenge of reconstructing dynamic visual experiences from brain activity (fMRI) by addressing inconsistent object representations and poor temporal coherence in video reconstruction, introducing SemVideo which achieves superior performance in semantic alignment and temporal consistency on CC2017 and HCP datasets, setting a new state-of-the-art.

Reconstructing dynamic visual experiences from brain activity provides a compelling avenue for exploring the neural mechanisms of human visual perception. While recent progress in fMRI-based image reconstruction has been notable, extending this success to video reconstruction remains a significant challenge. Current fMRI-to-video reconstruction approaches consistently encounter two major shortcomings: (i) inconsistent visual representations of salient objects across frames, leading to appearance mismatches; (ii) poor temporal coherence, resulting in motion misalignment or abrupt frame transitions. To address these limitations, we introduce SemVideo, a novel fMRI-to-video reconstruction framework guided by hierarchical semantic information. At the core of SemVideo is SemMiner, a hierarchical guidance module that constructs three levels of semantic cues from the original video stimulus: static anchor descriptions, motion-oriented narratives, and holistic summaries. Leveraging this semantic guidance, SemVideo comprises three key components: a Semantic Alignment Decoder that aligns fMRI signals with CLIP-style embeddings derived from SemMiner, a Motion Adaptation Decoder that reconstructs dynamic motion patterns using a novel tripartite attention fusion architecture, and a Conditional Video Render that leverages hierarchical semantic guidance for video reconstruction. Experiments conducted on the CC2017 and HCP datasets demonstrate that SemVideo achieves superior performance in both semantic alignment and temporal consistency, setting a new state-of-the-art in fMRI-to-video reconstruction.

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