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Open multimodal iEEG-fMRI dataset from naturalistic stimulation with a short audiovisual film

Julia Berezutskaya, Mariska J. Vansteensel, Erik J. Aarnoutse, Zachary V. Freudenburg, Giovanni Piantoni, Mariana P. Branco, Nick F. Ramsey

2022Scientific Data39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Intracranial human recordings are a valuable and rare resource of information about the brain. Making such data publicly available not only helps tackle reproducibility issues in science, it helps make more use of these valuable data. This is especially true for data collected using naturalistic tasks. Here, we describe a dataset collected from a large group of human subjects while they watched a short audiovisual film. The dataset has several unique features. First, it includes a large amount of intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG) data (51 participants, age range of 5-55 years, who all performed the same task). Second, it includes functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) recordings (30 participants, age range of 7-47) during the same task. Eighteen participants performed both iEEG and fMRI versions of the task, non-simultaneously. Third, the data were acquired using a rich audiovisual stimulus, for which we provide detailed speech and video annotations. This dataset can be used to study neural mechanisms of multimodal perception and language comprehension, and similarity of neural signals across brain recording modalities.

Topics & Concepts

Functional magnetic resonance imagingComputer scienceModalitiesPerceptionStimulus (psychology)Brain activity and meditationTask (project management)NeuroimagingElectroencephalographyArtificial intelligencePsychologyCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceSocial scienceEconomicsSociologyManagementNeural dynamics and brain functionMultisensory perception and integrationNeuroscience and Music Perception
Open multimodal iEEG-fMRI dataset from naturalistic stimulation with a short audiovisual film | Litcius