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Brain decoding of spontaneous thought: Predictive modeling of self-relevance and valence using personal narratives

Psychology

Brain decoding of spontaneous thought: Predictive modeling of self-relevance and valence using personal narratives

H. J. Kim, B. K. Lux, et al.

Can we read spontaneous thoughts? In this study, Hong Ji Kim, Byeol Kim Lux, Eunjin Lee, Emily S. Finn, and Choong-Wan Woo decoded two content dimensions of spontaneous thought—self-relevance and valence—directly from fMRI. Using individually generated personal stories (training n=49; tests total n=199), activity in default mode, ventral attention, and frontoparietal networks—plus anterior insula/midcingulate (self-relevance) and left TPJ/dorsomedial PFC (valence)—predicted internal thoughts and emotions, highlighting the potential for brain decoding of spontaneous thought.

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Abstract
The contents and dynamics of spontaneous thought are important factors for personality traits and mental health. However, assessing spontaneous thoughts is challenging due to their unconstrained nature, and directing participants’ attention to report their thoughts may fundamentally alter them. Here, we aimed to decode two key content dimensions of spontaneous thought—self-relevance and valence—directly from brain activity. To train functional MRI-based predictive models, we used individually generated personal stories as stimuli in a story-reading task to mimic narrative-like spontaneous thoughts (n = 49). We then tested these models on multiple test datasets (total n = 199). The default mode, ventral attention, and frontoparietal networks played key roles in the predictions, with the anterior insula and midcingulate cortex contributing to self-relevance prediction and the left temporoparietal junction and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex contributing to valence prediction. Overall, this study presents brain models of internal thoughts and emotions, highlighting the potential for the brain decoding of spontaneous thought.
Publisher
PNAS
Published On
Mar 28, 2024
Authors
Hong Ji Kim, Byeol Kim Lux, Eunjin Lee, Emily S. Finn, Choong-Wan Woo
Tags
spontaneous thought
self-relevance
valence
fMRI decoding
default mode network
personal narrative stimuli
anterior insula & midcingulate
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