Unsupervised method for representation transfer from one brain to another

Front Neuroinform. 2024 Nov 28:18:1470845. doi: 10.3389/fninf.2024.1470845. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Although the anatomical arrangement of brain regions and the functional structures within them are similar across individuals, the representation of neural information, such as recorded brain activity, varies among individuals owing to various factors. Therefore, appropriate conversion and translation of brain information is essential when decoding neural information using a model trained using another person's data or to achieving brain-to-brain communication. We propose a brain representation transfer method that involves transforming a data representation obtained from one person's brain into that obtained from another person's brain, without relying on corresponding label information between the transferred datasets. We defined the requirements to enable such brain representation transfer and developed an algorithm that distills the assumption of common similarity structure across the brain datasets into a rotational and reflectional transformation across low-dimensional hyperspheres using encoders for non-linear dimensional reduction. We first validated our proposed method using data from artificial neural networks as substitute neural activity and examining various experimental factors. We then evaluated the applicability of our method to real brain activity using functional magnetic resonance imaging response data acquired from human participants. The results of these validation experiments showed that our method successfully performed representation transfer and achieved transformations in some cases that were similar to those obtained when using corresponding label information. Additionally, we reconstructed images from individuals' data without training personalized decoders by performing brain representation transfer. The results suggest that our unsupervised transfer method is useful for the reapplication of existing models personalized to specific participants and datasets to decode brain information from other individuals. Our findings also serve as a proof of concept for the methodology, enabling the exchange of the latent properties of neural information representing individuals' sensations.

Keywords: artificial neural networks; brain-computer interface; brain-machine interface; brain-to-brain communication; fMRI; image reconstruction; representation transfer.

Grants and funding

The authors declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was financially supported by the Japan Science and Technology Agency, Moonshot Research & Development Program grant JPMJMS2012 (RH and RK) and the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) grant NICT 22301 (RH and SK).