Home Science Brain states recur across diverse narrative contexts...
Science

Brain states recur across diverse narrative contexts during longitudinal viewing

Key Points

What does the brain do during the continuous, varied experience of watching a story unfold? One account holds that the brain traverses a finite repertoire of recurring states, but whether that repertoire is a stable property of the individual or is reshaped by each new experience has not been tested across diverse naturalistic content within the same person. We characterized the dynamic brain-state repertoire in six individuals who watched the television series Friends across its six seasons...

What does the brain do during the continuous, varied experience of watching a story unfold? One account holds that the brain traverses a finite repertoire of recurring states, but whether that repertoire is a stable property of the individual or is reshaped by each new experience has not been tested across diverse naturalistic content within the same person. We characterized the dynamic brain-state repertoire in six individuals who watched the television series Friends across its six seasons during fMRI (up to ~146 episodes, ~54 hours per person). For each individual we fit a sticky hierarchical Dirichlet process hidden Markov model across all episodes, discovering brain states (recurring whole-brain activity patterns with characteristic coupling) without pre-specifying their number. Each individual's brain visited roughly forty-five states arrayed along a continuous recurrence gradient, from states active in nearly every episode to episode-specific ones, with no sharp division between them. The repertoire was heterogeneous in why its states recurred: a minority locked to scan-run structure, the majority remaining eligible for content. Transitions were organized by the functional-connectivity similarity between states (per-individual Spearman {rho} = 0.33-0.55) and, in most individuals, respected resting-state network boundaries. Episode content was associated with which states the brain occupied moment to moment. The recurrence ordering discovered in Friends transferred to state occupancy during other social-narrative films (five of six individuals) and attenuated as stimuli departed from that class, weakening for visual-only reading and audio-only listening. Across diverse narrative experience, the dynamic repertoire is a property of the individual: content varies which states are visited and when, not which states exist.
Dirichlet (ORG) Friends (ORG)
Originally published by bioRxiv Read original →