Sentence-level embeddings reveal dissociable word- and sentence-level cortical representation across coarse- and fine-grained levels of meaning

IF 2.1 2区 心理学 Q1 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY Brain and Language Pub Date : 2024-02-02 DOI:10.1016/j.bandl.2024.105389
Scott L. Fairhall
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Abstract

In this large-sample (N = 64) fMRI study, sentence embeddings (text-embedding-ada-002, OpenAI) and representational similarity analysis were used to contrast sentence-level and word-level semantic representation. Overall, sentence-level information resulted in a 20–25 % increase in the model’s ability to captures neural representation when compared to word-level only information (word-order scrambled embeddings). This increase was relatively undifferentiated across the cortex. However, when coarse-grained (across thematic category) and fine-grained (within thematic category) combinatorial meaning were separately assessed, word- and sentence-level representations were seen to strongly dissociate across the cortex and to do so differently as a function of grain. Coarse-grained sentence-level representations were evident in occipitotemporal, ventral temporal and medial prefrontal cortex, while fine-grained differences were seen in lateral prefrontal and parietal cortex, middle temporal gyrus, the precuneus, and medial prefrontal cortex. This result indicates dissociable cortical substrates underly single concept versus combinatorial meaning and that different cortical regions specialise for fine- and coarse-grained meaning.

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句子级嵌入揭示了粗粒度和细粒度意义层次上可分离的词级和句子级大脑皮层表征
在这项大样本(N = 64)fMRI 研究中,句子嵌入(text-embedding-ada-002,OpenAI)和表征相似性分析被用来对比句子级和单词级语义表征。总体而言,句子层面的信息使模型捕捉神经表征的能力比只捕捉单词层面的信息(单词顺序乱序嵌入)提高了 20-25%。这种提高在大脑皮层中的差异相对较小。然而,当分别评估粗粒度(跨主题类别)和细粒度(主题类别内)的组合意义时,单词和句子级别的表征在大脑皮层中出现了强烈的分化,并且随着粒度的变化而变化。粗粒度的句子级表征在枕颞叶、腹颞叶和内侧前额叶皮层很明显,而细粒度的差异则出现在外侧前额叶和顶叶皮层、颞中回、楔前区和内侧前额叶皮层。这一结果表明,单一概念和组合意义的皮层基底是不同的,不同的皮层区域擅长精细和粗粒度意义。
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来源期刊
Brain and Language
Brain and Language 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.00%
发文量
82
审稿时长
20.5 weeks
期刊介绍: An interdisciplinary journal, Brain and Language publishes articles that elucidate the complex relationships among language, brain, and behavior. The journal covers the large variety of modern techniques in cognitive neuroscience, including functional and structural brain imaging, electrophysiology, cellular and molecular neurobiology, genetics, lesion-based approaches, and computational modeling. All articles must relate to human language and be relevant to the understanding of its neurobiological and neurocognitive bases. Published articles in the journal are expected to have significant theoretical novelty and/or practical implications, and use perspectives and methods from psychology, linguistics, and neuroscience along with brain data and brain measures.
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