Haxby Experiment

The functional architecture of the object vision pathway in the human brain was investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure patterns of response in ventral temporal cortex while subjects viewed faces, cats, five categories of man-made objects, and nonsense pictures. A distinct pattern of response was found for each stimulus category.
Haxby
The distinctiveness of the response to a given category was not due simply to the regions that responded maximally to that category, because the category being viewed also could be identified on the basis of the pattern of response when those regions were excluded from the analysis. Patterns of response that discriminated among all categories were found even within cortical regions that responded maximally to only one category. These results indicate that the representations of faces and objects in ventral temporal cortex are widely distributed and overlapping.

Haxby

Haxby

In the original work, visual stimuli from 8 different categories are presented to 6 subjects during 12 sessions. The goal is to predict the category of the stimulus presented to the subject given the recorded fMRI volumes. For the sake of simplicity, we restrict the example to one subject and try to analyse the stimulus as per the presented images and in resting state as well.

Haxby Dataset

It is a block design fMRI dataset from a study on face and object representation in human ventral temporal cortex. It consists of 6 subjects/persons with 12 sessions per subject. In each run, the subjects passively viewed greyscale images of eight object categories, grouped in 24s blocks separated by rest periods. Each image was shown for 500ms and was followed by a 1500ms inter-stimulus interval. Full-brain fMRI data were recorded with a volume repetition time of 2.5s, thus, a stimulus block was covered by roughly 9 volumes. This dataset has been repeatedly reanalyzed.


Here,

ventral : abdominal area,
temporal : relating to time
cortex : the outer layer of cerebrum
cerebrum : the uppermost region of the brain or the biggest part of the brain