Researcher profile

Aditya R. Vaidya

Aditya R. Vaidya contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Fine-tuning language encoding models on slow fMRI improves prediction for fast ECoG

Neuroscientists have recently turned to intracranial brain recording methods, like electrocorticography (ECoG), for human experiments because of the fine spatial and temporal resolution that they afford. Models trained on this data, however, are fundamentally restricted by the patient populations that can receive the implants necessary for recording. We propose using non-invasive fMRI to bridge the gap in training data. Using spoken language representations fine-tuned on fMRI, we build encoding models of ECoG. These representations showed improved prediction performance in ECoG, even though the temporal resolution of fMRI is two orders of magnitude worse. Prediction improved in frequency bands well beyond what is directly measured in fMRI. Next, to test the procedure's generalization ability, we fine-tuned models on fMRI responses that were temporally downsampled by a factor of 2. Despite the loss in resolution, these models were able to predict fMRI and ECoG responses at levels comparable to the original fMRI-tuned models. Finally, we showed that ECoG performance steadily scales with the amount of fMRI-tuning data. Our results show that "slow" data like fMRI can be a valuable resource for building better models of "fast" brain data like ECoG. In the future, integrating across multiple recording methods may further improve performance in other applications, like decoding.

preprint2022arXiv

Self-supervised models of audio effectively explain human cortical responses to speech

Self-supervised language models are very effective at predicting high-level cortical responses during language comprehension. However, the best current models of lower-level auditory processing in the human brain rely on either hand-constructed acoustic filters or representations from supervised audio neural networks. In this work, we capitalize on the progress of self-supervised speech representation learning (SSL) to create new state-of-the-art models of the human auditory system. Compared against acoustic baselines, phonemic features, and supervised models, representations from the middle layers of self-supervised models (APC, wav2vec, wav2vec 2.0, and HuBERT) consistently yield the best prediction performance for fMRI recordings within the auditory cortex (AC). Brain areas involved in low-level auditory processing exhibit a preference for earlier SSL model layers, whereas higher-level semantic areas prefer later layers. We show that these trends are due to the models' ability to encode information at multiple linguistic levels (acoustic, phonetic, and lexical) along their representation depth. Overall, these results show that self-supervised models effectively capture the hierarchy of information relevant to different stages of speech processing in human cortex.