High performers demonstrate greater neural synchrony than low performers across behavioral domains

Author:

Chamberlain Taylor A.12,Corriveau Anna2,Song Hayoung2,Kwon Young Hye34,Yoo Kwangsun356,Chun Marvin M.378,Rosenberg Monica D.29

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, NY, United States

2. Department of Psychology, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States

3. Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States

4. Department of Neurology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States

5. Department of Digital Health, Samsung Advanced Institute for Health Sciences and Technology, Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, South Korea

6. Data Science Research Institute, Research Institute for Future Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, South Korea

7. Department of Neuroscience, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States

8. Wu Tsai Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States

9. Neuroscience Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States

Abstract

Abstract Heterogeneity in brain activity can give rise to heterogeneity in behavior, which in turn comprises our distinctive characteristics as individuals. Studying the path from brain to behavior, however, often requires making assumptions about how similarity in behavior scales with similarity in brain activity. Here, we expand upon recent work (Finn et al., 2020) which proposes a theoretical framework for testing the validity of such assumptions. Using intersubject representational similarity analysis in two independent movie-watching functional MRI (fMRI) datasets, we probe how brain-behavior relationships vary as a function of behavioral domain and participant sample. We find evidence that, in some cases, the neural similarity of two individuals is not correlated with behavioral similarity. Rather, individuals with higher behavioral scores are more similar to other high scorers whereas individuals with lower behavioral scores are dissimilar from everyone else. Ultimately, our findings motivate a more extensive investigation of both the structure of brain-behavior relationships and the tacit assumption that people who behave similarly will demonstrate shared patterns of brain activity.

Publisher

MIT Press

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