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Brains and algorithms partially converge in natural language processing

Computer Science

Brains and algorithms partially converge in natural language processing

C. Caucheteux and J. King

Explore how deep learning algorithms are beginning to mirror human brain activity during language processing! Researchers Charlotte Caucheteux and Jean-Rémi King delve into the striking similarities linking computational linguistics and cognitive neuroscience, revealing how modern language models might be paving the way towards understanding natural language processing.... show more
Abstract
Deep learning algorithms trained to predict masked words from large amount of text have recently been shown to generate activations similar to those of the human brain. However, what drives this similarity remains currently unknown. Here, we systematically compare a variety of deep language models to identify the computational principles that lead them to generate brain-like representations of sentences. Specifically, we analyze the brain responses to 400 isolated sentences in a large cohort of 102 subjects, each recorded for two hours with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and magnetoencephalography (MEG). We then test where and when each of these algorithms maps onto the brain responses. Finally, we estimate how the architecture, training, and performance of these models independently account for the generation of brain-like representations. Our analyses reveal two main findings. First, the similarity between the algorithms and the brain primarily depends on their ability to predict words from context. Second, this similarity reveals the rise and maintenance of perceptual, lexical, and compositional representations within each cortical region. Overall, this study shows that modern language algorithms partially converge towards brain-like solutions, and thus delineates a promising path to unravel the foundations of natural language processing.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Feb 16, 2022
Authors
Charlotte Caucheteux, Jean-Rémi King
Tags
deep learning
language models
human brain activity
sentence processing
fMRI
MEG
predictive algorithms
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