Science AI Determines Sex of Person From Brain Scans

February 19, 2024

Summary: Researchers developed an artificial intelligence model that accurately determines the sex of individuals based on brain scans, with over 90% success. This breakthrough supports the theory that significant sex differences in brain organization exist, challenging long-standing controversies.

The AI model focused on dynamic MRI scans, identifying specific brain networks—such as the default mode, striatum, and limbic networks—as critical in distinguishing male from female brains.

This research not only deepens our understanding of brain development and aging but also opens new avenues for addressing sex-specific vulnerabilities in psychiatric and neurological disorders.

Key Facts:

  1. High Accuracy in Sex Determination: The AI model’s ability to distinguish between male and female brain scans with more than 90% accuracy highlights intrinsic sex differences in brain organization.
  2. Key Brain Networks Identified: Explainable AI tools identified the default mode network, striatum, and limbic network as crucial areas the model analyzed to determine the sex of the brain scans, underscoring their roles in cognitive functions and behaviors.
  3. Potential for Personalized Medicine: The findings suggest that acknowledging sex differences in brain organization is vital for developing targeted treatments for neuropsychiatric conditions, paving the way for personalized medicine approaches.
Source: Stanford

A new study by Stanford Medicine investigators unveils a new artificial intelligence model that was more than 90% successful at determining whether scans of brain activity came from a woman or a man.


The findings, to be published Feb. 19 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, help resolve a long-term controversy about whether reliable sex differences exist in the human brain and suggest that understanding these differences may be critical to addressing neuropsychiatric conditions that affect women and men differently.

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The team then wondered if they could create another model that could predict how well participants would do on certain cognitive tasks based on functional brain features that differ between women and men. Credit: Neuroscience News

“A key motivation for this study is that sex plays a crucial role in human brain development, in aging, and in the manifestation of psychiatric and neurological disorders,” said Vinod Menon, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and director of the Stanford Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience Laboratory.

“Identifying consistent and replicable sex differences in the healthy adult brain is a critical step toward a deeper understanding of sex-specific vulnerabilities in psychiatric and neurological disorders.”

Menon is the study’s senior author. The lead authors are senior research scientist Srikanth Ryali, PhD, and academic staff researcher Yuan Zhang, PhD.

“Hotspots” that most helped the model distinguish male brains from female ones include the default mode network, a brain system that helps us process self-referential information, and the striatum and limbic network, which are involved in learning and how we respond to rewards.

The investigators noted that this work does not weigh in on whether sex-related differences arise early in life or may be driven by hormonal differences or the different societal circumstances that men and women may be more likely to encounter.

Uncovering brain differences

The extent to which a person’s sex affects how their brain is organized and operates has long been a point of dispute among scientists. While we know the sex chromosomes we are born with help determine the cocktail of hormones our brains are exposed to — particularly during early development, puberty and aging — researchers have long struggled to connect sex to concrete differences in the human brain.

Brain structures tend to look much the same in men and women, and previous research examining how brain regions work together has also largely failed to turn up consistent brain indicators of sex.

In their current study, Menon and his team took advantage of recent advances in artificial intelligence, as well as access to multiple large datasets, to pursue a more powerful analysis than has previously been employed.

First, they created a deep neural network model, which learns to classify brain imaging data: As the researchers showed brain scans to the model and told it that it was looking at a male or female brain, the model started to “notice” what subtle patterns could help it tell the difference.

This model demonstrated superior performance compared with those in previous studies, in part because it used a deep neural network that analyzes dynamic MRI scans. This approach captures the intricate interplay among different brain regions. When the researchers tested the model on around 1,500 brain scans, it could almost always tell if the scan came from a woman or a man.

The model’s success suggests that detectable sex differences do exist in the brain but just haven’t been picked up reliably before. The fact that it worked so well in different datasets, including brain scans from multiple sites in the U.S. and Europe, make the findings especially convincing as it controls for many confounds that can plague studies of this kind.

“This is a very strong piece of evidence that sex is a robust determinant of human brain organization,” Menon said.

Making predictions

Until recently, a model like the one Menon’s team employed would help researchers sort brains into different groups but wouldn’t provide information about how the sorting happened. Today, however, researchers have access to a tool called “explainable AI,” which can sift through vast amounts of data to explain how a model’s decisions are made.

Using explainable AI, Menon and his team identified the brain networks that were most important to the model’s judgment of whether a brain scan came from a man or a woman. They found the model was most often looking to the default mode network, striatum, and the limbic network to make the call.

The team then wondered if they could create another model that could predict how well participants would do on certain cognitive tasks based on functional brain features that differ between women and men.

They developed sex-specific models of cognitive abilities: One model effectively predicted cognitive performance in men but not women, and another in women but not men. The findings indicate that functional brain characteristics varying between sexes have significant behavioral implications.

“These models worked really well because we successfully separated brain patterns between sexes,” Menon said. “That tells me that overlooking sex differences in brain organization could lead us to miss key factors underlying neuropsychiatric disorders.”

While the team applied their deep neural network model to questions about sex differences, Menon says the model can be applied to answer questions regarding how just about any aspect of brain connectivity might relate to any kind of cognitive ability or behavior. He and his team plan to make their model publicly available for any researcher to use.

“Our AI models have very broad applicability,” Menon said. “A researcher could use our models to look for brain differences linked to learning impairments or social functioning differences, for instance — aspects we are keen to understand better to aid individuals in adapting to and surmounting these challenges.”

Funding: The research was sponsored by the National Institutes of Health (grants MH084164, EB022907, MH121069, K25HD074652 and AG072114), the Transdisciplinary Initiative, the Uytengsu-Hamilton 22q11 Programs, the Stanford Maternal and Child Health Research Institute, and the NARSAD Young Investigator Award.

Source (Archive)
 
Troon: This scan will prove I am a true and honest™ woman
Doctor: well we have your scan results and it says "100% Male"
Troon: REEE THIS CANNOT BE
Doctor: Now hold on, it also says you're "100% a bitch nigga and a faggot"
Troon: *cries in 41%*
 
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Reminds me of one of those "we have to pozz up machine learning so it won't learn uncomfortable realities" articles which with a straight face used the example that the face scans or voice scans or whatever "misidentified" troons...ie classified them as what they actually were, rather than playing along with their fetish like it's The Emperor's New Dress.
 
I can't wait until this marvel of technology is used for nothing but malevolent purposes.
>Lets use this tool to get back at chuds who said i couldn't be a woman
>Machine categorizes every troon as the gender they where born in
>THIS MACHINE IS BROKEN AND NEEDS TO BE FIXED
>"Ethics" department lobotomizes the AI to the point it just categorizes everyone as women
>The technology is deemed useless and trashed, all funding gone

I can already see it happening
 
  1. High Accuracy in Sex Determination: The AI model’s ability to distinguish between male and female brain scans with more than 90% accuracy highlights intrinsic sex differences in brain organization.
The 10% is either butch oilrig workers and effeminate makeup artists, or they let troons in the study.
I think this technology would give the elites a safe offramp to this social insanity. Full government sponsored transition for anyone (read, no one) who actually has the brain of the opposite gender.
 
Troon: This scan will prove I am a true and honest™ woman
Doctor: well we have you scan results and it says "100% Male"
Troon: REEE THIS CANNOT BE
Doctor: Now hold on, it also says you're "100% a bitch nigga and a faggot"
Troon: *cries in 41%*
You are 102% male with a 2% margin of error.
 
Reminds me of one of those "we have to pozz up machine learning so it won't learn uncomfortable realities" articles which with a straight face used the example that the face scans or voice scans or whatever "misidentified" troons...ie classified them as what they actually were, rather than playing along with their fetish like it's The Emperor's New Dress.
They have armies of low wage out of work technical writers "training" the AI as we speak so that it won't keep making "mistakes" like this. The official category on the rating rubric is "safety."

Don't think for a second this outrage against troonkind will be allowed to stand. The bots are the property of the programming sock wearers, after all.
 
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