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Sculpting New Visual Concepts into the Human Brain

Marius Cătălin Iordan, Victoria J. H. Ritvo, Kenneth A. Norman, Nicholas B. Turk-Browne, Jonathan D. Cohen
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.14.339853
Marius Cătălin Iordan
1Princeton Neuroscience Institute & Department of Psychology, Princeton University
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  • For correspondence: mci@princeton.edu
Victoria J. H. Ritvo
1Princeton Neuroscience Institute & Department of Psychology, Princeton University
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Kenneth A. Norman
1Princeton Neuroscience Institute & Department of Psychology, Princeton University
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Nicholas B. Turk-Browne
2Department of Psychology, Yale University
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Jonathan D. Cohen
1Princeton Neuroscience Institute & Department of Psychology, Princeton University
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Abstract

Learning requires changing the brain. This typically occurs through experience, study, or instruction. We report a new way of acquiring conceptual knowledge by directly sculpting activity patterns in the human brain. We used a non-invasive technique (closed-loop real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging) to create novel categories of visual objects in the brain. After training, participants exhibited behavioral and neural biases for the sculpted, but not control categories. The ability to sculpt new conceptual distinctions in the human brain, applied here to perception, has broad relevance to other domains of cognition such as decision-making, memory, and motor control. As such, the work opens up new frontiers in brain-machine interface design, neuroprosthetics, and neurorehabilitation.

One Sentence Summary Sculpting new visual categories in the brain with neurofeedback restructured subjective experience and neural processing.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted October 15, 2020.
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Sculpting New Visual Concepts into the Human Brain
Marius Cătălin Iordan, Victoria J. H. Ritvo, Kenneth A. Norman, Nicholas B. Turk-Browne, Jonathan D. Cohen
bioRxiv 2020.10.14.339853; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.14.339853
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Sculpting New Visual Concepts into the Human Brain
Marius Cătălin Iordan, Victoria J. H. Ritvo, Kenneth A. Norman, Nicholas B. Turk-Browne, Jonathan D. Cohen
bioRxiv 2020.10.14.339853; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.14.339853

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