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. 2019 Mar 19;10:1258. doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-09239-1

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

MEG and behavioral RDM comparisons. a Time course of correlation (partial Spearman, partialling out low-level features) between behavioral and MEG RDMs (n = 14). Gray-shaded area indicates estimated noise ceiling based on the variability across subjects. b Model-based commonality analysis showing the portion of shared variance between MEG and behavior (gray line) uniquely explained by gender (i.e., commonality coefficient; red), age (green) and identity (blue). Note that this analysis was restricted to the time window of the significant correlation between MEG and behavior (as shown in a). Colored lines below plots indicate significant times using cluster-based sign permutation test (cluster-defining threshold p < 0.05, and corrected significance level p < 0.05). Source data are provided as a Source Data file