4.7 Article Data Paper

Dataset of human intracranial recordings during famous landmark identification

Journal

SCIENTIFIC DATA
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01125-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute for Deafness and other Communication Disorders [DC014589]
  2. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [NS098981]
  3. BRAIN Initiative [NS098971-03S1]
  4. National Institutes of Health [R24MH114796]

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This study utilized high spatiotemporal resolution direct intracranial recordings to investigate the network dynamics involved in visual scene recognition. A dataset containing recordings from a large cohort of humans identifying images of famous landmarks was provided, along with behavioral metrics and electrode localization. This rich dataset allows for further exploration of the spatiotemporal progression of neural processes involved in visual processing, scene recognition, and cued memory recall.
For most people, recalling information about familiar items in a visual scene is an effortless task, but it is one that depends on coordinated interactions of multiple, distributed neural components. We leveraged the high spatiotemporal resolution of direct intracranial recordings to better delineate the network dynamics underpinning visual scene recognition. We present a dataset of recordings from a large cohort of humans while they identified images of famous landmarks (50 individuals, 52 recording sessions, 6,775 electrodes, 6,541 trials). This dataset contains local field potential recordings derived from subdural and penetrating electrodes covering broad areas of cortex across both hemispheres. We provide this pre-processed data with behavioural metrics (correct/incorrect, response times) and electrode localisation in a population-normalised cortical surface space. This rich dataset will allow further investigation into the spatiotemporal progression of multiple neural processes underlying visual processing, scene recognition and cued memory recall.

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