1. Distinct neural mechanisms for remembering when an event occurred
- Author
-
Jenkins, Lucas J and Ranganath, Charan
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Adult ,Brain ,Brain Mapping ,Discrimination ,Psychological ,Female ,Humans ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Memory ,Multivariate Analysis ,Pattern Recognition ,Visual ,Photic Stimulation ,Young Adult ,episodic memory ,temporal order memory ,recency discrimination ,temporal context ,functional MRI ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Events are often remembered as having occurred in a specific order, but almost nothing is known about how the brain encodes this temporal information. It is commonly assumed that temporal information is encoded via a single mechanism, based either on the temporal context in which the event occurred or inferred from the strength of the memory trace itself. By analyzing time-dependent changes in activity patterns, we show that the distinctiveness of contextual representations in the hippocampus and anterior and medial prefrontal cortex was associated with accurate recency memory. In contrast, overall activation in the perirhinal and lateral prefrontal cortices predicted whether an object would be judged more recent, regardless of accuracy. These results demonstrate that temporal information was encoded through at least two complementary neural mechanisms.
- Published
- 2016