English

A Cognitive Process-Inspired Architecture for Subject-Agnostic Brain Visual Decoding

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2026-02-25 v2 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

Subject-agnostic brain decoding, which aims to reconstruct continuous visual experiences from fMRI without subject-specific training, holds great potential for clinical applications. However, this direction remains underexplored due to challenges in cross-subject generalization and the complex nature of brain signals. In this work, we propose Visual Cortex Flow Architecture (VCFlow), a novel hierarchical decoding framework that explicitly models the ventral-dorsal architecture of the human visual system to learn multi-dimensional representations. By disentangling and leveraging features from early visual cortex, ventral, and dorsal streams, VCFlow captures diverse and complementary cognitive information essential for visual reconstruction. Furthermore, we introduce a feature-level contrastive learning strategy to enhance the extraction of subject-invariant semantic representations, thereby enhancing subject-agnostic applicability to previously unseen subjects. Unlike conventional pipelines that need more than 12 hours of per-subject data and heavy computation, VCFlow sacrifices only 7\% accuracy on average yet generates each reconstructed video in 10 seconds without any retraining, offering a fast and clinically scalable solution. The source code will be released upon acceptance of the paper.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2511.02565,
  title  = {A Cognitive Process-Inspired Architecture for Subject-Agnostic Brain Visual Decoding},
  author = {Jingyu Lu and Haonan Wang and Qixiang Zhang and Xiaomeng Li},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2511.02565},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

Accepted at the International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR), 2026

R2 v1 2026-07-01T07:21:13.394Z