Gaussian process linking functions for mind, brain, and behavior.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The longstanding connection between mind, brain, and behavior has seen new developments, leveraging statistical associations between brain activity and behavioral metrics using hierarchical latent variable models.
  • Traditional methods faced limitations in flexibility, hindering the understanding of complex brain dynamics, prompting the introduction of a nonparametric, data-driven approach that allows for more intricate linking between brain and behavior.
  • Through simulations and real experimental data, the new model demonstrated its capability to accurately represent neural and behavioral interactions, revealing significant latent cognitive dynamics and providing insights into the underlying processes at play.

Article Abstract

The link between mind, brain, and behavior has mystified philosophers and scientists for millennia. Recent progress has been made by forming statistical associations between manifest variables of the brain (e.g., electroencephalogram [EEG], functional MRI [fMRI]) and manifest variables of behavior (e.g., response times, accuracy) through hierarchical latent variable models. Within this framework, one can make inferences about the mind in a statistically principled way, such that complex patterns of brain-behavior associations drive the inference procedure. However, previous approaches were limited in the flexibility of the linking function, which has proved prohibitive for understanding the complex dynamics exhibited by the brain. In this article, we propose a data-driven, nonparametric approach that allows complex linking functions to emerge from fitting a hierarchical latent representation of the mind to multivariate, multimodal data. Furthermore, to enforce biological plausibility, we impose both spatial and temporal structure so that the types of realizable system dynamics are constrained. To illustrate the benefits of our approach, we investigate the model's performance in a simulation study and apply it to experimental data. In the simulation study, we verify that the model can be accurately fitted to simulated data, and latent dynamics can be well recovered. In an experimental application, we simultaneously fit the model to fMRI and behavioral data from a continuous motion tracking task. We show that the model accurately recovers both neural and behavioral data and reveals interesting latent cognitive dynamics, the topology of which can be contrasted with several aspects of the experiment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703643PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1912342117DOI Listing

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