Schultz Heidrun, Stoffregen Hanna, Dabas Aroma, Alcobendas María, Benoit Roland G
Max Planck Research Group Adaptive Memory, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Chair of Lifespan Developmental Neuroscience, TUD Dresden University of Technology, Dresden, Germany.
Imaging Neurosci (Camb). 2025 Feb 18;3. doi: 10.1162/imag_a_00476. eCollection 2025.
An integral part of episodic retrieval is the reinstatement of neural activity that was present in the medial temporal lobe during encoding. However, neural memory representations do not remain static. Consolidation promotes the transformation of representations that are specific to individual episodes toward more generalized representations that reflect commonalities across episodes. Moreover, reward has been shown to augment episodic memory by enhancing consolidation, and it may accelerate the transformation of neural memory representations. We investigated this account with n = 40 human participants using fMRI and an associative memory task. They encoded pictures of objects, each with one of four recurring scenes. Two scenes led to high reward, and two led to low reward. The next day, participants encountered the objects again and retrieved the scenes from memory. Using representational similarity analysis, we demonstrate that retrieval is concurrently accompanied by the reinstatement of original neural representations and the activation of transformed, more generalized memories. Specifically, the parahippocampal cortex reinstates scene-specific patterns from the encoding phase during successful retrieval. In contrast, activity patterns in the medial prefrontal cortex and anterior hippocampus reflect transformed memories: They become more similar to each other for memories sharing the same scene, independent of memory success. Importantly, high reward enhances memory transformation in the anterior hippocampus. The brain thus maintains complementary memory representations: An episodic representation that resembles the original encoding pattern, and a generalized representation that summarizes commonalities across memories-in part for particularly valuable information.
情景记忆检索的一个重要组成部分是恢复编码过程中内侧颞叶出现的神经活动。然而,神经记忆表征并非一成不变。巩固过程促进了特定于单个情景的表征向更具普遍性的表征的转变,这些普遍性表征反映了不同情景之间的共性。此外,研究表明奖励通过增强巩固来增强情景记忆,并且可能加速神经记忆表征的转变。我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)和联想记忆任务,对40名人类参与者进行了研究。他们对物体图片进行编码,每张图片都配有四个重复出现的场景之一。其中两个场景会带来高奖励,另外两个场景带来低奖励。第二天,参与者再次看到这些物体,并从记忆中检索场景。通过表征相似性分析,我们证明检索过程同时伴随着原始神经表征的恢复以及转变后的、更具普遍性记忆的激活。具体而言,在成功检索期间,海马旁回皮质会恢复编码阶段的特定场景模式。相比之下,内侧前额叶皮质和前海马体中的活动模式反映了转变后的记忆:对于共享相同场景的记忆,它们彼此之间变得更加相似,而与记忆是否成功无关。重要的是,高奖励会增强前海马体中的记忆转变。因此,大脑维持着互补的记忆表征:一种类似于原始编码模式的情景表征,以及一种总结记忆共性的普遍性表征——部分是针对特别有价值的信息。