Abstract

Mathematical operations have long been regarded as a sparse, symbolic process in neuroimaging studies. In contrast, advances in artificial neural networks (ANN) have enabled extracting distributed representations of mathematical operations. Recent neuroimaging studies have compared distributed representations of the visual, auditory and language domains in ANNs and biological neural networks (BNNs). However, such a relationship has not yet been examined in mathematics. Here we hypothesise that ANN-based distributed representations can explain brain activity patterns of symbolic mathematical operations. We used the fMRI data of a series of mathematical problems with nine different combinations of operators to construct voxel-wise encoding/decoding models using both sparse operator and latent ANN features. Representational similarity analysis demonstrated shared representations between ANN and BNN, an effect particularly evident in the intraparietal sulcus. Feature-brain similarity (FBS) analysis served to reconstruct a sparse representation of mathematical operations based on distributed ANN features in each cortical voxel. Such reconstruction was more efficient when using features from deeper ANN layers. Moreover, latent ANN features allowed the decoding of novel operators not used during model training from brain activity. The current study provides novel insights into the neural code underlying mathematical thought.

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