arXiv:2501.06278v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Contemporary neural networks intended for natural language processing (NLP) are not designed with specific linguistic rules. It suggests that they may acquire a general understanding of language. This attribute has led to extensive research in deciphering their internal representations. A pioneering method involves an experimental setup using human brain data to explore if a translation between brain and neural network representations can be established. Since this technique emerged, more sophisticated NLP models have been developed. In our study, we apply this method to evaluate four new NLP models aiming to identify the one most compatible with brain activity. Additionally, to explore how the brain comprehends text semantically, we alter the text by removing punctuation in four different ways to understand its impact on semantic processing by the human brain. Our findings indicate that the RoBERTa model aligns best with brain activity, outperforming BERT in accuracy according to our metrics. Furthermore, for BERT, higher accuracy was noted when punctuation was excluded, and increased context length did not significantly diminish accuracy compared to the original results with punctuation.
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