Coupling Artificial Neurons in BERT and Biological Neurons in the Human Brain
Xu Liu, Mengyue Zhou, Gaosheng Shi, Yu Du, Lin Zhao, Zihao Wu, David, Liu, Tianming Liu, Xintao Hu

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel framework that couples fine-grained artificial neurons in BERT with functional brain networks derived from fMRI data, revealing significant synchronization and interpretability in neurolinguistic contexts.
Contribution
It defines fine-grained artificial neurons in BERT and couples them with brain networks, advancing the understanding of neural representations of language.
Findings
Significant synchronization between artificial and biological neuron activations.
Artificial neurons encode meaningful linguistic and semantic information.
Coupled neurons are interpretable within neurolinguistic frameworks.
Abstract
Linking computational natural language processing (NLP) models and neural responses to language in the human brain on the one hand facilitates the effort towards disentangling the neural representations underpinning language perception, on the other hand provides neurolinguistics evidence to evaluate and improve NLP models. Mappings of an NLP model's representations of and the brain activities evoked by linguistic input are typically deployed to reveal this symbiosis. However, two critical problems limit its advancement: 1) The model's representations (artificial neurons, ANs) rely on layer-level embeddings and thus lack fine-granularity; 2) The brain activities (biological neurons, BNs) are limited to neural recordings of isolated cortical unit (i.e., voxel/region) and thus lack integrations and interactions among brain functions. To address those problems, in this study, we 1) define…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Topic Modeling · Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
