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Neuropsychology
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JoVE 과학 교육 Neuropsychology
Decoding Auditory Imagery with Multivoxel Pattern Analysis
  • 00:00개요
  • 01:30Experimental Design
  • 04:40Running the Experiment
  • 06:37Data Analysis
  • 07:54Representative Results
  • 09:50Applications
  • 11:14Summary

다용적 패턴 분석으로 청각 이미지 디코딩

English

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개요

출처: 조나스 T. 카플란과 사라 I. 짐벨의 연구소 – 서던 캘리포니아 대학

벨이 울리는 소리를 상상해 보십시오. 우리가 “마음의 귀”에서 이런 소리를 떠올립니다. 뇌가 지각에 사용하는 상상력에 동일한 메커니즘을 사용 한다는 증거가 증가하고 있습니다. 1 예를 들어, 시각적 이미지를 상상할 때, 시각 피질이 활성화되고, 상상할 때, 청각 피질이 종사한다. 그러나, 우리의 상상력의 내용에 특정 감각 코르티스의 이러한 활성화는 어느 정도?

이 질문에 대답하는 데 도움이 될 수있는 한 가지 기술은 기능성 뇌 이미지를 기계 학습 기술을 사용하여 분석되는 멀티 복셀 패턴 분석 (MPVA)입니다. 2-3 MPVA 실험에서, 우리는 다른 자극에 의해 연상 활동의 다양한 패턴을 구별하는 기계 학습 알고리즘을 훈련. 예를 들어, 종의 소리를 상상하는 것이 전기톱의 소리나 바이올린의 소리를 상상하는 것과 비교하여 청각 피질에서 다양한 활동 패턴을 생성하는지 물어볼 수 있습니다. 우리의 분류자가 이 세 자극에 의해 생성된 두뇌 활동 패턴을 구별하는 것을 배우는 경우에, 우리는 청각 피질이 각 자극에 의해 명백한 방법으로 활성화된다는 것을 결론을 내릴 수 있습니다. 이런 종류의 실험을 생각하는 한 가지 방법은 단순히 뇌 영역의 활동에 대한 질문을 하는 대신 해당 지역의 정보 내용에 대한 질문을 한다는 것입니다.

이 실험에서는 Meyer 외,2010,4를 기반으로 참가자들에게 청각 이미지를 불러 일으킬 가능성이 있는 조용한 비디오를 제시하여 여러 가지 사운드를 상상할 수 있도록 할 것입니다. 청각 피질의 상상력에 의해 유발되는 미묘한 패턴을 측정하는 데 관심이 있기 때문에 fMRI 스캐너가 만든 시끄러운 소음으로부터 간섭없이 자극이 완전한 침묵으로 제시되는 것이 바람직합니다. 이를 위해 스파스 측두시 샘플링이라고 하는 특수 한 종류의 기능MRI 시퀀스를 사용합니다. 이러한 접근법에서, 단일 fMRI 부피는 각 자극 후 4-5초씩 획득되며, 혈역학 반응의 피크를 포착하는 데 시간이 정해지한다.

Procedure

1. 참가자 모집 20명의 참가자를 모집합니다. 참가자는 오른손잡이여야 하며 신경학적 또는 심리적 장애의 병력이 없어야 합니다. 참가자는 시각적 신호를 제대로 볼 수 있도록 정상 또는 수정된 투 정상 시야를 가져야 합니다. 참가자는 몸에 금속이 없어야 합니다. 이것은 fMRI에 관련된 높은 자기장 때문에 중요한 안전 요구 사항입니다. fMRI는 스캐너 보어의 ?…

Results

The average classifier accuracy in the planum temporale across all 20 participants was 59%. According to the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank test, this is significantly different from chance level of 33%. The mean performance in the frontal pole mask was 32.5%, which is not greater than chance (Figure 2).

Figure 2
Figure 2. Classification performance in each participant. For three-way classification, chance performance is 33%. According to a permutation test, the alpha level of p < 0.05 corresponds to 42%.

The permutation test found that only 5% of the permutations achieved accuracy greater than 42%; thus, our statistical threshold for individual subjects is 42%. Nineteen of the 20 subjects had classifier performance significantly greater than chance using voxels from the planum temporale, while none had performance greater than chance using voxels from the frontal pole.

Thus, we are able to successfully predict from patterns of activity in auditory cortex which of the three sounds the participant was imagining. We were not able to make this prediction based on activity patterns from the frontal pole, suggesting that the information is not global throughout the brain.

Applications and Summary

MVPA is a useful tool for understanding how the brain represents information. Instead of considering the time-course of each voxel separately as in a traditional activation analysis, this technique considers patterns across many voxels at once, offering increased sensitivity compared with univariate techniques. Often a multivariate analysis uncovers differences where a univariate technique is not able to. In this case, we learned something about the mechanisms of mental imagery by probing the information content in a specific area of the brain, the auditory cortex. The content-specific nature of these activation patterns would be difficult to test with univariate approaches.

There are additional benefits that come from direction of inference in this kind of analysis. In MVPA we start with patterns of brain activity and attempt to infer something about the mental state of the participant. This kind of “brain-reading” approach can lead to the development of brain-computer interfaces, and may allow new opportunities for communication with those with impaired speech or movement.

References

  1. Kosslyn, S.M., Ganis, G. & Thompson, W.L. Neural foundations of imagery. Nat Rev Neurosci 2, 635-642 (2001).
  2. Haynes, J.D. & Rees, G. Decoding mental states from brain activity in humans. Nat Rev Neurosci 7, 523-534 (2006).
  3. Norman, K.A., Polyn, S.M., Detre, G.J. & Haxby, J.V. Beyond mind-reading: multi-voxel pattern analysis of fMRI data. Trends Cogn Sci 10, 424-430 (2006).
  4. Meyer, K., et al. Predicting visual stimuli on the basis of activity in auditory cortices. Nat Neurosci 13, 667-668 (2010).

내레이션 대본

Auditory imagery is a process that gives rise to the experience of hearing sounds, even when there are no external auditory stimuli present.

For instance, think about hearing the sound of a cell phone ringing. While information within memory underlies this imaginary event, evidence suggests that an individual’s brain uses the same mechanisms for imagination as those that are involved in the actual perception.

Just upon imagining the ringing, regions within the auditory cortex become activated. However, even though this is true across acoustic stimuli, how sounds are encoded to allow for the detailed processing of distinct sounds—like distinguishing between a doorbell chime and a song playing on the radio—is an important question.

Based on previous work by Meyer and colleagues, this video demonstrates how to combine functional magnetic resonance imaging—fMRI—with presentations of different silent videos to investigate how the brain responds to auditory imagery.

We will also describe how to use a method called multi-voxel pattern analysis—MVPA for short—to predict what subjects have imagined by analyzing patterns of activation obtained during fMRI sessions.

In this experiment, participants lie in an fMRI scanner and are shown a series of silent videos. Each one—whether it’s a rooster crowing, a chainsaw cutting through a tree, or a person playing a piano—evokes distinctive and vivid auditory imagery, and they are asked to imagine the sounds during every single presentation.

The imaging acquisition procedure relies upon sparse temporal sampling, whereby a single fMRI volume is acquired 4 to 5 s after each stimulus is presented. Such timing captures the peak of the hemodynamic response and reduces the likelihood that signals would be masked by scanner noise.

Each imagined sound is expected to induce subtle yet distinctive patterns of neural activity, specifically in the auditory cortex. Here, pattern is the key word: The classical way to analyze these data uses a univariate approach, where the individual voxels—representing some level of activation—are collapsed into a single average.

These values are then compared across sounds and may not produce any significant differences in activation levels.

Instead, using a multivariate analysis, multiple voxels are laid out for each sound and activation levels can be compared collectively, across all voxels—contributing to a unique overall pattern for each imagined sound.

With this multi-voxel pattern analysis, or MVPA, approach, if the patterns are indeed sensitive to specific content, then it’s possible that they could be used to predict the original stimulus. That’s right—MVPA is often referred to as a mind-reading technique!

To achieve this prediction aspect, more intensive processing must be performed after collecting the participants’ data, which are divided into training and testing sets.

Labeled data from the training set are first subjected to machine-learning calculations, specifically, a Support Vector Machine algorithm. This process is used to accurately classify data by recognizing features in the neural patterns that may distinguish the three types of sounds from one another.

After the classifier has learned features to accurately identify the types, it’s presented with unlabeled data from the testing set, and its guesses are then compared to the correct stimuli labels.

In this case, the classification performance serves as the dependent variable—recorded as the classifier’s accuracy—which is also compared to voxels evoked in a different location in the brain, such as the frontal pole.

The classifier is expected to predict the identification of auditory imagery, revealing the importance of MVPA in detecting content-specific activity within the auditory cortex.

Per experimental and safety concerns, verify that all participants are right-handed, have normal or corrected-to-normal vision, no history of neurological disorders or claustrophobia, and do not possess any metal in their body. Also, ensure that they fill out the necessary consent forms.

Before proceeding, explain that they will see several short silent videos in the scanner that may evoke a sound in their mind. Ask them to focus on the imagined sounds, “hear” them as best as they can, and to remain still for the duration of the task.

Now, prepare the participant to enter the scanner. To see these steps in detail, please refer to another fMRI video produced in this collection.

Following preparation, align the participant and send them inside the bore. In the adjacent room, first collect a high-resolution anatomical scan. Then, synchronize the start of the silent video presentation with the start of the functional scan.

To achieve sparse temporal sampling, set the acquisition time of an MRI volume to 2 s, with a 9-s delay in between.

Importantly, coordinate the start of each 5-s video clip to begin 4 s after the previous MRI acquisition starts to capture the hemodynamic activity that corresponds to the middle of the movie.

Present each video 10 times, in random order, generating one scanning session that lasts 5.5 min. Repeat this functional acquisition sequence three more times.

After the four functional scans have been performed, bring the participant out of the scanner, and debrief them to conclude the study.

To define regions of interest, use the high-resolution anatomical scans of each participant and trace voxels on the surface of the temporal lobe that correspond to the early auditory cortex, also known as the planum temporale. In addition, create a mask containing voxels in the frontal lobe, which will be used as the control region.

Then, preprocess the data by performing motion correction to reduce movement artifacts and temporal filtering to remove signal drifts.

Next, divide the data into two sets: training and testing. In one data set, train a classifier—a support vector machine algorithm—making sure to keep data from the two brain regions separate for each subject.

In the other set, assess what the classifier has learned—its ability to correctly guess the identity of unlabeled data—and record the algorithm’s accuracy across runs. Perform this procedure a total of four times, leaving out one functional scan as testing data each time—a process called cross-validation.

To visualize the data, graph the averaged classifier accuracies across the four cross-validation folds for each participant.

Plot these averages for both the primary region of interest—the planum temporale—and the control area—the frontal pole—to compare focal specificity of the classifier, the extent to which a particular area, such as the auditory cortex, is selectively predicted to be involved in auditory imagination.

In this case, run a non-parametric statistic, the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank test, to test performance against chance, which is 33%. Note that the average classifier accuracy in the auditory cortex was 59%, which is significantly different from chance level.

In contrast, the mean performance in the frontal pole mask was 33%, which is not significantly different from chance.

Moreover, notice that classifier performance varied across individuals. After using a permutation test to calculate a new statistical threshold of 42%, see that 19 of 20 subjects had accuracy values significantly greater than this level using voxels from the planum temporale, whereas none had performance greater than chance using voxels from the frontal pole.

Overall, these results imply that MVPA techniques accurately predicted which of the three sounds participants were imagining based on patterns of neural activity. Such predictions were only made within the auditory cortex, suggesting that acoustic content is not represented globally throughout the brain.

Now that you are familiar with how to apply multi-voxel pattern analysis to study auditory imagery, let’s look at how neuropsychologists use multivariate techniques to advance a futuristic approach to mind-reading—the decoding of mental states—in other domains.

Classifiers have been used on fMRI data obtained from the ventral temporal cortex to predict the kinds of objects participants viewed, distinguishing between houses and faces, for example.

Taking this a step further, it’s even possible to predict whether the individual would buy that house or find the person pleasant. As creepy as that sounds, these neuromarketing implications are not far-fetched!

The same approach could also be used to detect either emotional states after watching a show—recognizing that a scary film is indeed terrifying—or even the movie genre; for instance, the frightening flick might engage the amygdala more predictably over a contemplative one that would reliably involve the prefrontal cortex.

In addition, brain-computer interfaces could convert mental states into signals that would enhance communication, in the case of individuals undergoing speech therapy, or movements, for those who’ve suffered from amputation of a limb.

You’ve just watched JoVE’s video on understanding auditory imagery using multi-voxel pattern analysis. Now you should have a good understanding of how to design and conduct the auditory imagery experiment in conjunction with functional neuroimaging, and finally how to analyze and interpret specific patterns of brain activity.

Thanks for watching!

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JoVE Science Education Database. JoVE Science Education. Decoding Auditory Imagery with Multivoxel Pattern Analysis. JoVE, Cambridge, MA, (2023).