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Feature-specific neural reactivation during episodic memory

Psychology

Feature-specific neural reactivation during episodic memory

M. B. Bone, F. Ahmad, et al.

This groundbreaking study by Michael B. Bone, Fahad Ahmad, and Bradley R. Buchsbaum delves into feature-specific informational connectivity (FSIC) to decode neural reactivation during episodic visual recall. Discover how low- and high-level feature reactivation correlates with memory vividness and recognition accuracy, challenging traditional views on visual hierarchy.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
We present a multi-voxel analytical approach, feature-specific informational connectivity (FSIC), that leverages hierarchical representations from a neural network to decode neural reactivation in fMRI data collected while participants performed an episodic visual recall task. We show that neural reactivation associated with low-level (e.g., edges), high-level (e.g., facial features), and semantic (e.g., "terrier") features occur throughout the dorsal and ventral visual streams and extend into the frontal cortex. Moreover, we show that reactivation of both low- and high-level features correlate with the vividness of the memory, whereas only reactivation of low-level features correlates with recognition accuracy when the lure and target images are semantically similar. In addition to demonstrating the utility of FSIC for mapping feature-specific reactivation, these findings resolve the contributions of low- and high-level features to the vividness of visual memories and challenge a strict interpretation the posterior-to-anterior visual hierarchy.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Apr 23, 2020
Authors
Michael B. Bone, Fahad Ahmad, Bradley R. Buchsbaum
Tags
feature-specific reactivation
fMRI data
neural networks
episodic visual recall
memory vividness
recognition accuracy
visual streams
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