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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Distinct Representational Structure and Localization for Visual Encoding and Recall during Visual Imagery.

TLDR
Using ultra-high-field functional magnetic resonance imaging with an item-based visual recall task, an in-depth comparison of encoding and recall along a spectrum of granularity is conducted, suggesting visual recall is not merely a reactivation of encoding patterns, displaying a different representational structure and localization from encoding, despite some overlap.
Abstract
During memory recall and visual imagery, reinstatement is thought to occur as an echoing of the neural patterns during encoding. However, the precise information in these recall traces is relatively unknown, with previous work primarily investigating either broad distinctions or specific images, rarely bridging these levels of information. Using ultra-high-field (7T) functional magnetic resonance imaging with an item-based visual recall task, we conducted an in-depth comparison of encoding and recall along a spectrum of granularity, from coarse (scenes, objects) to mid (e.g., natural, manmade scenes) to fine (e.g., living room, cupcake) levels. In the scanner, participants viewed a trial-unique item, and after a distractor task, visually imagined the initial item. During encoding, we observed decodable information at all levels of granularity in category-selective visual cortex. In contrast, information during recall was primarily at the coarse level with fine-level information in some areas; there was no evidence of mid-level information. A closer look revealed segregation between voxels showing the strongest effects during encoding and those during recall, and peaks of encoding-recall similarity extended anterior to category-selective cortex. Collectively, these results suggest visual recall is not merely a reactivation of encoding patterns, displaying a different representational structure and localization from encoding, despite some overlap.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Direct comparison of contralateral bias and face/scene selectivity in human occipitotemporal cortex

TL;DR: The authors measured fMRI responses to scene and face stimuli presented in the left or right visual field and computed two bias indices: a contralateral bias (response to the contral anterior minus ipsilateral visual field) and a face/scene bias (preferred response to scenes compared to faces, or vice versa).
Journal ArticleDOI

Category-sensitive incidental reinstatement in medial temporal lobe subregions during word recognition

TL;DR: It is shown that MTL subregions including the PRC, PHC, and HC differentially reinstate category-sensitive representations during high-confident word recognition, even though no explicit instruction to retrieve the associated category was given.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multidimensional memory topography in the medial parietal cortex identified from neuroimaging of thousands of daily memory videos

TL;DR: The authors found that memory features are tightly interrelated, highlighting the need to test them in conjunction, and discover a multidimensional topography in medial parietal cortex, with subregions sensitive to a memory's age, strength, and the familiarity of the people and places involved.
Posted ContentDOI

Spatiotemporal dynamics of self-generated imagery reveal a reverse cortical hierarchy from cue-induced imagery

Yiheng Hu, +1 more
- 25 Jan 2023 - 
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the spatiotemporal dynamics of self-generated imagery and cue-induced imagery in both EEG and fMRI, and found that the former was supported by an enhanced involvement of anterior cortex in generating and maintaining imagined contents, as evidenced by enhanced neural representations of orientations in sustained potentials in central channels in EEG and in posterior frontal cortex in fMRI.
Journal ArticleDOI

RETRACTED: Age-related declines in neural selectivity manifest differentially during encoding and recognition

TL;DR: In this article , the authors assessed age differences in neural selectivity during first encoding, repeated encoding, and recognition, as well as the underlying pattern (broadening vs. attenuation) and found lower selectivity in older compared to younger adults during all memory stages.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

AFNI: software for analysis and visualization of functional magnetic resonance neuroimages

TL;DR: A package of computer programs for analysis and visualization of three-dimensional human brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) results is described and techniques for automatically generating transformed functional data sets from manually labeled anatomical data sets are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why there are complementary learning systems in the hippocampus and neocortex: insights from the successes and failures of connectionist models of learning and memory.

TL;DR: The account presented here suggests that memories are first stored via synaptic changes in the hippocampal system, that these changes support reinstatement of recent memories in the neocortex, that neocortical synapses change a little on each reinstatement, and that remote memory is based on accumulated neocorticals changes.
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A cortical representation of the local visual environment

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that a particular area within human parahippocampal cortex is involved in a critical component of navigation: perceiving the local visual environment, and it is proposed that the PPA represents places by encoding the geometry of the local environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Representational Similarity Analysis – Connecting the Branches of Systems Neuroscience

TL;DR: A new experimental and data-analytical framework called representational similarity analysis (RSA) is proposed, in which multi-channel measures of neural activity are quantitatively related to each other and to computational theory and behavior by comparing RDMs.
Journal ArticleDOI

The lateral occipital complex and its role in object recognition.

TL;DR: Overall, these results indicate that the lateral occipital complex plays an important role in human object recognition.
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