Multi-modal brain encoding models for multi-modal stimuli
Oota, Subba Reddy, Pahwa, Khushbu, Marreddy, Mounika, Singh, Maneesh, Gupta, Manish, Raju, Bapi S.
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Despite participants engaging in unimodal stimuli, such as watching images or silent videos, recent work has demonstrated that multi-modal Transformer models can predict visual brain activity impressively well, even with incongruent modality representations. This raises the question of how accurately these multi-modal models can predict brain activity when participants are engaged in multi-modal stimuli. As these models grow increasingly popular, their use in studying neural activity provides insights into how our brains respond to such multi-modal naturalistic stimuli, i.e., where it separates and integrates information across modalities through a hierarchy of early sensory regions to higher cognition. We investigate this question by using multiple unimodal and two types of multi-modal models-cross-modal and jointly pretrained-to determine which type of model is more relevant to fMRI brain activity when participants are engaged in watching movies. We observe that both types of multi-modal models show improved alignment in several language and visual regions. This study also helps in identifying which brain regions process unimodal versus multi-modal information. We further investigate the contribution of each modality to multi-modal alignment by carefully removing unimodal features one by one from multi-modal representations, and find that there is additional information beyond the unimodal embeddings that is processed in the visual and language regions. Based on this investigation, we find that while for cross-modal models, their brain alignment is partially attributed to the video modality; for jointly pretrained models, it is partially attributed to both the video and audio modalities. This serves as a strong motivation for the neuroscience community to investigate the interpretability of these models for deepening our understanding of multi-modal information processing in brain.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
May-27-2025
- Country:
- Asia
- Europe > Germany
- Berlin (0.04)
- North Rhine-Westphalia > Cologne Region
- Bonn (0.04)
- North America > United States
- New York > New York County > New York City (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report
- Experimental Study (0.68)
- New Finding (1.00)
- Research Report
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (1.00)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science (1.00)
- Machine Learning > Neural Networks
- Deep Learning (1.00)
- Natural Language > Large Language Model (0.93)
- Representation & Reasoning (1.00)
- Vision (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence