Litcius/Paper detail

A large-scale examination of inductive biases shaping high-level visual representation in brains and machines

Colin Conwell, Jacob S. Prince, Kendrick Kay, George A. Alvarez, Talia Konkle

2024Nature Communications78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The rapid release of high-performing computer vision models offers new potential to study the impact of different inductive biases on the emergent brain alignment of learned representations. Here, we perform controlled comparisons among a curated set of 224 diverse models to test the impact of specific model properties on visual brain predictivity - a process requiring over 1.8 billion regressions and 50.3 thousand representational similarity analyses. We find that models with qualitatively different architectures (e.g. CNNs versus Transformers) and task objectives (e.g. purely visual contrastive learning versus vision- language alignment) achieve near equivalent brain predictivity, when other factors are held constant. Instead, variation across visual training diets yields the largest, most consistent effect on brain predictivity. Many models achieve similarly high brain predictivity, despite clear variation in their underlying representations - suggesting that standard methods used to link models to brains may be too flexible. Broadly, these findings challenge common assumptions about the factors underlying emergent brain alignment, and outline how we can leverage controlled model comparison to probe the common computational principles underlying biological and artificial visual systems.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceLeverage (statistics)Artificial intelligenceMachine learningSet (abstract data type)Task (project management)Brain activity and meditationSimilarity (geometry)Variation (astronomy)Computational modelNeurosciencePsychologyElectroencephalographyEconomicsAstrophysicsProgramming languagePhysicsManagementImage (mathematics)Face Recognition and PerceptionNeural dynamics and brain functionDomain Adaptation and Few-Shot Learning
A large-scale examination of inductive biases shaping high-level visual representation in brains and machines | Litcius