Neural codes track prior events in a narrative and predict subsequent memory for details.

Silvy H P Collin, Ross P Kempner, Sunita Srivatsan, Kenneth A Norman
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Abstract

Throughout our lives, we learn schemas that specify what types of events to expect in particular contexts and the temporal order in which these events usually occur. Here, our first goal was to investigate how such context-dependent temporal structures are represented in the brain during processing of temporally extended events. To accomplish this, we ran a 2-day fMRI study (N = 40) in which we exposed participants to many unique animated videos of weddings composed of sequences of rituals; each sequence originated from one of two fictional cultures (North and South), where rituals were shared across cultures, but the transition structure between these rituals differed across cultures. The results, obtained using representational similarity analysis, revealed that context-dependent temporal structure is represented in multiple ways in parallel, including distinct neural representations for the culture, for particular sequences, and for past and current events within the sequence. Our second goal was to test the hypothesis that neural schema representations scaffold memory for specific details. In keeping with this hypothesis, we found that the strength of the neural representation of the North/South schema for a particular wedding predicted subsequent episodic memory for the details of that wedding.

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神经编码在叙述中跟踪先前的事件,并预测随后的细节记忆。
在我们的一生中,我们学习了一些模式,这些模式指定了在特定的上下文中应该期待什么类型的事件,以及这些事件通常发生的时间顺序。在这里,我们的第一个目标是研究在处理时间扩展事件时,这些与上下文相关的时间结构是如何在大脑中表现出来的。为了做到这一点,我们进行了为期两天的功能磁共振成像研究(N = 40),其中我们向参与者展示了许多由仪式序列组成的独特的婚礼动画视频;每个序列都起源于两种虚构的文化(北方和南方)中的一种,在这两种文化中,仪式是跨文化共享的,但这些仪式之间的过渡结构因文化而异。使用表征相似性分析获得的结果显示,上下文相关的时间结构以多种方式并行表示,包括对文化、特定序列以及序列中过去和当前事件的不同神经表示。我们的第二个目标是测试神经图式表征支撑特定细节记忆的假设。根据这一假设,我们发现,特定婚礼的南北图式的神经表征强度预测了随后对婚礼细节的情景记忆。
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