Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
UC Davis Center for Neuroscience, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Nat Commun. 2023 Mar 8;14(1):1279. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-36805-5.
Although every life event is unique, there are considerable commonalities across events. However, little is known about whether or how the brain flexibly represents information about different event components at encoding and during remembering. Here, we show that different cortico-hippocampal networks systematically represent specific components of events depicted in videos, both during online experience and during episodic memory retrieval. Regions of an Anterior Temporal Network represented information about people, generalizing across contexts, whereas regions of a Posterior Medial Network represented context information, generalizing across people. Medial prefrontal cortex generalized across videos depicting the same event schema, whereas the hippocampus maintained event-specific representations. Similar effects were seen in real-time and recall, suggesting reuse of event components across overlapping episodic memories. These representational profiles together provide a computationally optimal strategy to scaffold memory for different high-level event components, allowing efficient reuse for event comprehension, recollection, and imagination.
虽然每个生命事件都是独特的,但在事件之间存在着相当多的共同之处。然而,人们对于大脑在编码和回忆过程中是否以及如何灵活地表示不同事件成分的信息知之甚少。在这里,我们表明,不同的皮质-海马网络系统地表示视频中描绘的不同事件成分的信息,无论是在在线体验期间还是在情节记忆检索期间。前颞叶网络的区域代表了关于人的信息,在不同的情境中具有通用性,而后内侧网络的区域则代表了情境信息,在不同的人中具有通用性。内侧前额叶皮质在描绘相同事件模式的视频中具有通用性,而海马体则保持事件特定的表示。在实时和回忆中都观察到了类似的效果,这表明在重叠的情节记忆中可以跨事件组件进行重复使用。这些表示性的特征共同提供了一种计算上最优的策略,为不同的高级事件成分的记忆提供支撑,从而允许对事件理解、回忆和想象进行高效的重复使用。