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Involuntary and voluntary memory retrieval relies on distinct neural representations and oscillatory processes

Psychology

Involuntary and voluntary memory retrieval relies on distinct neural representations and oscillatory processes

M. Kobelt, G. T. Waldhauser, et al.

In this study, involuntary memory retrieval triggered sensory feature–dependent but item‑unspecific reactivation through temporally extended memory replay and rapid mid‑frontal theta increases, while voluntary retrieval engaged prefrontal–medial temporal theta to produce temporally compressed, item‑specific reactivation lacking encoding visual‑field features. Research conducted by Malte Kobelt, Gerd T. Waldhauser, Marie-Christin Fellner, and Nikolai Axmacher.... show more
Abstract
Involuntary memory retrieval is a hallmark symptom of posttraumatic stress disorder and a frequent phenomenon in everyday autobiographical memory. However, the neural mechanisms that drive involuntary retrieval remain unclear. This study aims to elucidate how involuntary retrieval spontaneously initiates memory reactivation and how the reactivated neural representations differ in their content, distinctiveness and temporal compression from voluntary retrieval. Combining a visual half-field paradigm with electroencephalography recordings (EEG) in humans, we tracked reactivation of item-specific neural representations and sensory feature representations measured as representational similarity between different items sharing the same sensory feature – the visual field at encoding. We show that involuntary retrieval reactivated sensory feature-dependent yet item-unspecific representations via temporally extended memory replay, accompanied by rapid mid-frontal theta-power increases, indicating memory interference. This neural process differed from voluntary retrieval which recruited goal-directed memory search processes in prefrontal-medial temporal lobe theta-bands to reactivate temporally compressed item-specific representations devoid of visual field specific sensory feature representations at encoding. Our findings demonstrate that involuntary memories rely on distinct neural processes that access different representational formats compared to voluntary retrieval offering a nuanced understanding of episodic memory functioning relevant to psychological well-being.
Publisher
PLOS Biology
Published On
Aug 19, 2025
Authors
Malte Kobelt, Gerd T. Waldhauser, Marie-Christin Fellner, Nikolai Axmacher
Tags
involuntary memory retrieval
voluntary retrieval
representational similarity
EEG theta oscillations
sensory feature reactivation
memory replay
item-specific representations
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