Have you been there before? Decoding recognition of spatial scenes from fMRI signals in precuneus

Author:

Bogler Carsten1ORCID,Zangrossi Andrea23,Miller Chantal4,Sartori Giuseppe2,Haynes John‐Dylan14567

Affiliation:

1. Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Charité‐Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

2. Department of General Psychology University of Padova Padova Italy

3. Padova Neuroscience Center (PNC) University of Padova Padova Italy

4. Berlin School of Mind and Brain Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

5. Max Planck School of Cognition Leipzig Germany

6. Berlin Center for Advanced Neuroimaging Charité‐Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

7. Clinic of Neurology Charité‐Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

Abstract

AbstractOne potential application of forensic “brain reading” is to test whether a suspect has previously experienced a crime scene. Here, we investigated whether it is possible to decode real life autobiographic exposure to spatial locations using fMRI. In the first session, participants visited four out of eight possible rooms on a university campus. During a subsequent scanning session, subjects passively viewed pictures and videos from these eight possible rooms (four old, four novel) without giving any responses. A multivariate searchlight analysis was employed that trained a classifier to distinguish between “seen” versus “unseen” stimuli from a subset of six rooms. We found that bilateral precuneus encoded information that can be used to distinguish between previously seen and unseen rooms and that also generalized to the two stimuli left out from training. We conclude that activity in bilateral precuneus is associated with the memory of previously visited rooms, irrespective of the identity of the room, thus supporting a parietal contribution to episodic memory for spatial locations. Importantly, we could decode whether a room was visited in real life without the need of explicit judgments about the rooms. This suggests that recognition is an automatic response that can be decoded from fMRI data, thus potentially supporting forensic applications of concealed information tests for crime scene recognition.

Publisher

Wiley

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