Researchers Find Brain Mechanism Behind 'Flashes of Intuition'
Humanlike Ability of Related AI Model to Impact Industry
Now a new study, led by researchers at NYU Langone Health, addresses the moments when we first recognize a blurry object, a primal ability that enabled our ancestors to avoid threats.
Published online Feb. 4 in Nature Communications, the new work pinpoints for the first time the brain region called the high-level visual cortex (HLVC) as the place where "priors" — images seen in the past and stored — are accessed to enable one-shot perceptual learning.
"Our work revealed, not just where priors are stored, but also the brain computations involved," said co-senior study author
Importantly, past studies had shown that patients with schizophrenia and Parkinson's disease have abnormal one-shot learning, such that previously stored priors overwhelm what a person is presently looking at to generate hallucinations.
"This study yielded a directly testable theory on how priors act up during hallucinations, and we are now investigating the related brain mechanisms in patients with neurological disorders to reveal what goes wrong," added
The research team is also looking into likely connections between the brain mechanisms behind visual perception and the better-known type of "aha moment" when we comprehend a new idea.
Sharper Image
For the study,
The researchers "took pictures" of brain activity during prior access using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which measures brain cell activity by tracking blood flow to active cells. Signaling strength along nerve pathways (plasticity), however, is fine-tuned in the structural spaces (synapses) between brain cells, and fMRI can only measure activity within cells.
For that reason, the researchers combined fMRI with behavioral tests using Mooney images, electroencephalography (EEG) brain recordings, and a model based on machine learning — a form of AI — to locate priors in the HLVC.
To find the seat of one-shot perceptual learning, the research team first determined what kind of information is encoded in signaling changes as prior access improves image recognition. To do so, the team changed the size of images, their position on the page, and their orientation (by rotating them), and recorded the effect of each change on image recognition rates. This behavioral study revealed that changes in the image size did not change one-shot learning, while rotating an image or changing its position partially decreased learning. The results suggested that perceptual priors encode previously seen patterns but not more abstract concepts (e.g., the breed of a dog in an image).
The team then created statistical models that captured brain cell activity patterns via fMRI during prior access, and found that only the known neural coding patterns in the high-level visual cortex matched the properties of the priors that the behavioral study revealed. The authors also probed the timing properties of activity changes using intracranial electroencephalography (EEG) by asking patients already undergoing iEEG monitoring during neurosurgical treatment to perform a short perceptual task. iEEG collects readouts from electrodes on brain tissue to measure fast changing signaling patterns that fMRI cannot measure. The HLVC showed the earliest neural signaling strength changes just as prior-guided object recognition occurred.
As a final step, the research team built a vision transformer — an artificial intelligence model that finds patterns in image parts and fills in what is missing based on probabilities. Just as the HLVC was found to add prior weight to information coming in from the eyes, the AI model stored accumulated image information (priors) in one module, and then used the stored data to better recognize incoming imaging data in another module. Once trained on enough images, the neural network model achieved one-shot learning capability like that seen in humans, and better than other leading AI models without a comparable prior module.
"Although AI has made great progress in object recognition over the past decade, no tool has yet been capable of one-shot learning like humans," added co-senior author
Along with Drs. He and Oermann, authors included first authors
This work was supported by a W.M. Keck Foundation medical research grant, National Science Foundation grant BCS-1926780, and the NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Oermann holds equity in Artisight Inc., Delvi Inc., and Eikon Therapeutics, and has consulting arrangements with Google Inc., and Sofinnova Partners. These relationships are managed in accordance with New York University policies.
About NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health is a fully integrated health system that consistently achieves the best patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation. Vizient, Inc., has ranked NYU Langone No. 1 out of 118 comprehensive academic medical centers across the nation for four years in a row, and U.S. News & World Report recently ranked four of its clinical specialties No. 1 in the nation. NYU Langone offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high standard of care across seven inpatient locations, its Perlmutter Cancer Center, and more than 320 outpatient locations in the
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SOURCE NYU Langone Health System
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