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Measuring mental time travel: Is the hippocampus really critical for episodic memory and episodic foresight?

Authors :
Thomas Suddendorf
Kimberley A. McFarlane
Beyon Miloyan
Source :
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. 117
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Mental time travel is an adaptive capacity that enables humans to engage in deliberate, prudent action on the basis of remembering past episodes (episodic memory) and simulating future scenarios (episodic foresight). This capacity has become a popular and rapidly growing topic of interdisciplinary research. Perhaps the most influential and frequently tested neuroscientific hypothesis in this domain is that the hippocampus is a hub in a critical neural network for mental time travel, support for which is now commonly assumed by most researchers in the area. In light of recent findings revealing limitations with existing measures of episodic foresight, we critically evaluate the available evidence for this hypothesis and find that it is inconclusive. We suggest that this is due in significant part to the exclusive and widespread reliance on noisy verbal measures and discuss this case as an example of a more general issue pertaining to the measurement of episodic foresight. Accordingly, we suggest that an essential focus of future research should concern the development of objective measures that capture capacity differences by requiring people to put foresight not just into words, but into action.

Details

ISSN :
19738102
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....54b00bd5dda83a8a16dc1aa82c4cc984