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Decoding individual identity from brain activity elicited in imagining common experiences

Psychology

Decoding individual identity from brain activity elicited in imagining common experiences

A. J. Anderson, K. Mcdermott, et al.

This groundbreaking study explores how individual differences in imagining common experiences resonate in brain activity. Through fMRI scans of 26 participants vividly imagining various scenarios, the researchers uncovered insights that could transform our understanding of personalized mental imagery. This research was conducted by Andrew James Anderson, Kelsey McDermott, Brian Rooks, Kathi L. Heffner, David Dodell-Feder, and Feng V. Lin.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Everyone experiences common events differently. This leads to personal memories that presumably provide neural signatures of individual identity when events are reimagined. We present initial evidence that these signatures can be read from brain activity. To do this, we progress beyond previous work that has deployed generic group-level computational semantic models to distinguish between neural representations of different events, but not revealed interpersonal differences in event representations. We scanned 26 participants' brain activity using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging as they vividly imagined themselves personally experiencing 20 common scenarios (e.g., dancing, shopping, wedding). Rather than adopting a one-size-fits-all approach to generically model scenarios, we constructed personal models from participants' verbal descriptions and self-ratings of sensory/motor/cognitive/spatiotemporal and emotional characteristics of the imagined experiences. We demonstrate that participants' neural representations are better predicted by their own models than other peoples’. This showcases how neuroimaging and personalized models can quantify individual-differences in imagined experiences.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Nov 21, 2020
Authors
Andrew James Anderson, Kelsey McDermott, Brian Rooks, Kathi L. Heffner, David Dodell-Feder, Feng V. Lin
Tags
brain activity
fMRI
individual differences
personalized models
imagined experiences
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