[OC] two different peoples emotional response in fMRI Posted by HoldDoorHoldor Tags:DataData Is BeautifulDataIsBeautiful 4 comments I agree more with the person on the left Probably could use a schematic of the brain as an overlay to have some idea of landmarks and areas Ever since they got statistically significant fMRI results by showing movies to dead salmon, I’ve been skeptical of fMRI. The [source](https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata20143) is 7T fMRI of subjects listening to an audio-description of *Forrest Gump*. This is PCA on the hidden representations of a 3D CNN classifier. More methodology to be published soon in a paper with the [Canadian Undergraduate Conference in AI](https://cucai.ca). [GitHub](https://github.com). Comments are closed.
Ever since they got statistically significant fMRI results by showing movies to dead salmon, I’ve been skeptical of fMRI.
The [source](https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata20143) is 7T fMRI of subjects listening to an audio-description of *Forrest Gump*. This is PCA on the hidden representations of a 3D CNN classifier. More methodology to be published soon in a paper with the [Canadian Undergraduate Conference in AI](https://cucai.ca). [GitHub](https://github.com).
4 comments
I agree more with the person on the left
Probably could use a schematic of the brain as an overlay to have some idea of landmarks and areas
Ever since they got statistically significant fMRI results by showing movies to dead salmon, I’ve been skeptical of fMRI.
The [source](https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata20143) is 7T fMRI of subjects listening to an audio-description of *Forrest Gump*.
This is PCA on the hidden representations of a 3D CNN classifier. More methodology to be published soon in a paper with the [Canadian Undergraduate Conference in AI](https://cucai.ca). [GitHub](https://github.com).
Comments are closed.