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Hyperalignment Modeling Shared Information

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Hyperalignment: Modeling shared information encoded in idiosyncratic cortical topographies

James Haxby

Prof.

Dartmouth College

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Friday, June 26, 2020

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Friday, June 26, 2020

3:30 PM Europe/London

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Host: Oxford WINeuro

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Oxford WINeuro

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70.00 minutes

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Abstract

Information that is shared across brains is encoded in idiosyncratic fine-scale functional topographies. Hyperalignment jointly models shared information and idiosyncratic topographies. Pattern vectors for neural responses and connectivities are projected into a common, high-dimensional information space, rather than being aligned in a canonical anatomical space. Hyperalignment calculates individual transformation matrices that preserve the geometry of pairwise dissimilarities between pattern vectors. Individual cortical topographies are modeled as mixtures of overlapping, individual-specific topographic basis functions, rather than as contiguous functional areas. The fundamental property of brain function that is preserved across brains is information content, rather than the functional properties of local features that support that content.

Topics

brain functioncognitioncomputational neurosciencecortical topographiesfMRIfunctional topographieshyperalignmentinformation spaceneural responsespairwise dissimilaritiestopographic basis functionstransformation matrices

About the Speaker

James Haxby

Prof.

Dartmouth College

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

faculty-directory.dartmouth.edu/james-v-haxby

@haxbylab

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twitter.com/haxbylab

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