Decoding the representation of source code categories in the brain of expert programmers

Yoshiharu Ikutani (1821003)


Expertise enables humans to achieve outstanding performance on domain-specific tasks, and programming is no exception. Many studies have shown that expert programmers exhibit remarkable differences from novices in behavioral performance, knowledge structure, and selective attention. However, the underlying differences in the brain of programmers are still unclear. We here address this issue by associating the cortical representation of source code with individual programming expertise using a data-driven decoding approach. This approach enabled us to identify seven brain regions, widely distributed in the frontal, parietal, and temporal cortices, that have a tight relationship with programming expertise. In these brain regions, functional categories of source code could be decoded from brain activity and the decoding accuracies were significantly correlated with individual behavioral performances on a source code categorization task. Our results suggest that programming expertise is built upon fine-tuned cortical representations specialized for the domain of programming.

In the presentation, we will talk in Japanese with slides written in English.