The Hippocampal-Cortical Networks Subserving Episodic Memory and Its Component Memory Systems for Object, Place and Temporal Order

Author(s):  
Owen Y. Chao ◽  
Joseph P. Huston ◽  
Maria A. de Souza Silva
2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa C. Castro ◽  
Ricardo R. Gudwin

In this paper the authors present the development of a scene-based episodic memory module for the cognitive architecture controlling an autonomous virtual creature, in a simulated 3D environment. The scene-based episodic memory has the role of improving the creature’s navigation system, by evoking the objects to be considered in planning, according to episodic remembrance of earlier scenes testified by the creature where these objects were present in the past. They introduce the main background on human memory systems and episodic memory study, and provide the main ideas behind the experiment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (5) ◽  
pp. 1005-1028 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franziska Orscheschek ◽  
Tilo Strobach ◽  
Torsten Schubert ◽  
Timothy Rickard

There is evidence in the literature that two retrievals from long-term memory cannot occur in parallel. To date, however, that work has explored only the case of two retrievals from newly acquired episodic memory. These studies demonstrated a retrieval bottleneck even after dual-retrieval practice. That retrieval bottleneck may be a global property of long-term memory retrieval, or it may apply only to the case of two retrievals from episodic memory. In the current experiments, we explored whether that apparent dual-retrieval bottleneck applies to the case of one retrieval from episodic memory and one retrieval from highly overlearned semantic memory. Across three experiments, subjects learned to retrieve a left or right keypress response form a set of 14 unique word cues (e.g., black—right keypress). In addition, they learned a verbal response which involved retrieving the antonym of the presented cue (e.g., black—“white”). In the dual-retrieval condition, subjects had to retrieve both the keypress response and the antonym word. The results suggest that the retrieval bottleneck is superordinate to specific long-term memory systems and holds across different memory components. In addition, the results support the assumption of a cue-level response chunking account of learned retrieval parallelism.


Cortex ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 547-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianfranco Dalla Barba ◽  
Vincenzo Parlato ◽  
Antoinette Jobert ◽  
Yves Samson ◽  
Sabina Pappata

2010 ◽  
Vol 215 (2) ◽  
pp. 172-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Céline Fouquet ◽  
Christine Tobin ◽  
Laure Rondi-Reig

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuzhen Zuo ◽  
Lei Wang ◽  
Junghan Shin ◽  
Yudian Cai ◽  
Sang Wan Lee ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTHumans recall the past by replaying fragments of events temporally. Here, we demonstrate a similar effect in macaques. We trained six rhesus monkeys with a temporal-order judgement (TOJ) task and collected 5000 TOJ trials. In each trial, they watched a naturalistic video of about 10 s comprising two across-context clips, and after a 2-s delay, performed TOJ between two frames from the video. The monkeys apply a non-linear forward, time-compressed replay mechanism during the temporal-order judgement. In contrast with humans, such compression of replay is however not sophisticated enough to allow them to skip over irrelevant information by compressing the encoded video globally. We also reveal that the monkeys detect event contextual boundaries and such detection facilitates recall by an increased rate of information accumulation. Demonstration of a time-compressed, forward replay like pattern in the macaque monkeys provides insights into the evolution of episodic memory in our lineage.Impact StatementMacaque monkeys temporally compress past experiences and use a forward-replay mechanism during judgment of temporal-order between episodes.


1999 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 464-465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Parker

Three comments are made. The proposal that recollection and familiarity-based recognition take different thalamic routes does not fit recent experimental evidence, suggesting that mediodorsal thalamus acts in an integrative role with respect to prefrontal cortex. Second, the role of frontal cortex in episodic memory has been understated. Third, the role of the hippocampal axis is likely to be the computation and storage of ideothetic information.


2015 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley B. Klein ◽  
Hans J. Markowitsch

AbstractThe relations between the semantic and episodic-autobiographical memory systems are more complex than described in the target article. We argue that understanding the noetic/autonoetic distinction provides critical insights into the foundation of the delineation between the two memory systems. Clarity with respect to the criteria for classification of these two systems, and the evolving conceptualization of episodic memory, can further neuroscientifically informed therapeutic approaches.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristian Morales ◽  
Juan Facundo Morici ◽  
Nelson Espinosa ◽  
Agostina Sacson ◽  
Ariel Lara-Vasquez ◽  
...  

AbstractEpisodic memory establishes and stores relations among the different elements of an experience, which are often similar and difficult to distinguish. Pattern separation, implemented by the dentate gyrus, is a neural mechanism that allows the discrimination of similar experiences by orthogonalizing synaptic inputs. Granule cells support such disambiguation by sparse rate coding, a process tightly controlled by highly diversified GABAergic neuronal populations, such as somatostatin-expressing cells which directly target the dendritic arbor of granule cells, massively innervated by entorhinal inputs reaching the molecular layer and conveying contextual information. Here, we tested the hypothesis that somatostatin neurons regulate the excitability of the dentate gyrus, thus controlling the efficacy of pattern separation during memory encoding in mice. Indeed, optogenetic suppression of dentate gyrus somatostatin neurons increased spiking activity in putative excitatory neurons and triggered dentate spikes. Moreover, optical inhibition of somatostatin neurons impaired both contextual and spatial discrimination of overlapping episodic-like memories during task acquisition. Importantly, effects were specific for similar environments, suggesting that pattern separation was selectively engaged when overlapping conditions ought to be distinguished. Overall, our results suggest that somatostatin cells regulate excitability in the dentate gyrus and are required for effective pattern separation during episodic memory encoding.Significance statementMemory systems must be able to discriminate stored representations of similar experiences in order to efficiently guide future decisions. This is solved by pattern separation, implemented in the dentate gyrus by granule cells to support episodic memory formation. The tonic inhibitory bombardment produced by multiple GABAergic cell populations maintains low activity levels in granule cells, permitting the process of pattern separation. Somatostatin-expressing cells are one of those interneuron populations, selectively targeting the distal dendrites of granule cells, where cortical multimodal information reaches the dentate gyrus. Hence, somatostatin cells constitute an ideal candidate to regulate pattern separation. Here, by using optogenetic stimulation in mice, we demonstrate that somatostatin cells are required for the acquisition of both contextual and spatial overlapping memories.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jared J. Peterson ◽  
Jennica S. Rogers ◽  
Heather R. Bailey

Event boundaries are important moments throughout an ongoing activity that influence perception and memory. They allow people to parse continuous activities into meaningful events, encode the temporal sequence of events and bind event information together in episodic memory (DuBrow & Davachi, 2013). Thus, drawing attention to event boundaries may facilitate these important perceptual and encoding processes. In the current study, we used emotionally arousing stimuli to guide attention to event boundaries because this type of stimulus has been shown to influence perception and attention. We evaluated whether accentuating event boundaries with commercials improves memory and whether emotional stimuli further enhance this effect. A total of 97 participants watched a television episode in which we manipulated commercial break locations (boundary, non-boundary, no commercial) and the type of commercial (emotional, neutral) and then completed memory tasks. Overall, placing emotionally arousing commercials at event boundaries increased memory for the temporal order of events, but no other effects of accentuating event boundaries were observed. Thus, drawing attention to event boundaries—via emotionally charged commercials—increases the likelihood that people will perceive the change in events, update their mental model accordingly and better integrate temporal information from the just-encoded event.


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