Reconstructing Spatiotemporal Trajectories of Visual Object Memories in the Human Brain.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
eNeuro Pub Date : 2024-09-27 Print Date: 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1523/ENEURO.0091-24.2024
Julia Lifanov-Carr, Benjamin J Griffiths, Juan Linde-Domingo, Catarina S Ferreira, Martin Wilson, Stephen D Mayhew, Ian Charest, Maria Wimber
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Abstract

How the human brain reconstructs, step-by-step, the core elements of past experiences is still unclear. Here, we map the spatiotemporal trajectories along which visual object memories are reconstructed during associative recall. Specifically, we inquire whether retrieval reinstates feature representations in a copy-like but reversed direction with respect to the initial perceptual experience, or alternatively, this reconstruction involves format transformations and regions beyond initial perception. Participants from two cohorts studied new associations between verbs and randomly paired object images, and subsequently recalled the objects when presented with the corresponding verb cue. We first analyze multivariate fMRI patterns to map where in the brain high- and low-level object features can be decoded during perception and retrieval, showing that retrieval is dominated by conceptual features, represented in comparatively late visual and parietal areas. A separately acquired EEG dataset is then used to track the temporal evolution of the reactivated patterns using similarity-based EEG-fMRI fusion. This fusion suggests that memory reconstruction proceeds from anterior frontotemporal to posterior occipital and parietal regions, in line with a conceptual-to-perceptual gradient but only partly following the same trajectories as during perception. Specifically, a linear regression statistically confirms that the sequential activation of ventral visual stream regions is reversed between image perception and retrieval. The fusion analysis also suggests an information relay to frontoparietal areas late during retrieval. Together, the results shed light onto the temporal dynamics of memory recall and the transformations that the information undergoes between the initial experience and its later reconstruction from memory.

重构人脑中视觉对象记忆的时空轨迹
人脑如何逐步重建过去经验的核心要素,目前仍不清楚。在这里,我们绘制了在联想回忆过程中重建视觉对象记忆的时空轨迹。具体来说,我们要探究的是,检索是否以类似复制但与最初感知经验相反的方向恢复特征表征,或者这种重建是否涉及格式转换和最初感知之外的区域。来自两个组群的参与者研究了动词与随机配对的物体图像之间的新关联,随后在出现相应的动词线索时回忆了这些物体。我们首先分析了多变量 fMRI 模式,以绘制在感知和检索过程中大脑中可解码高、低层次物体特征的位置图,结果表明检索由概念特征主导,表现在相对较晚的视觉和顶叶区域。然后,利用基于相似性的脑电图-核磁共振成像融合技术,使用单独获取的脑电图数据集跟踪重新激活模式的时间演变。融合结果表明,记忆重建是从前额颞区到后枕区和顶叶区进行的,符合从概念到知觉的梯度,但只是部分遵循与知觉过程相同的轨迹。具体来说,线性回归统计证实,腹侧视觉流区域的顺序激活在图像感知和检索之间是相反的。融合分析还表明,在检索的后期,信息会中继到前顶叶区域。我们结合脑电图和 fMRI 研究了从外显记忆中回忆视觉对象时,哪些特征会被重新激活,以及记忆重建流是如何随着时间的推移在大脑中展开的。我们的研究结果表明,相对于感知,记忆检索沿着从概念到感知梯度的逆向信息轨迹进行,并将检索到的信息传递到多模态前顶叶脑区。这些发现解决了一个基本问题,即记忆是对过去事件或多或少的真实再现,还是受到系统性偏差的影响,使某些类型的特征优先于其他特征。我们的数据表明,外显记忆检索是一个动态和高度重构的过程,抽象概念信息明显优先于详细感知信息。
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来源期刊
eNeuro
eNeuro Neuroscience-General Neuroscience
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
2.90%
发文量
486
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: An open-access journal from the Society for Neuroscience, eNeuro publishes high-quality, broad-based, peer-reviewed research focused solely on the field of neuroscience. eNeuro embodies an emerging scientific vision that offers a new experience for authors and readers, all in support of the Society’s mission to advance understanding of the brain and nervous system.
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