4.7 Article

Complementary Roles of Human Hippocampal Subregions during Retrieval of Spatiotemporal Context

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 34, Issue 20, Pages 6834-6842

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5341-13.2014

Keywords

episodic memory; high-res fMRI; hippocampus; multivariate pattern analysis; parahippocampal cortex; spatiotemporal

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [R01NS076856]
  2. Sloan Foundation
  3. Hellman Young Investigator Award

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Current evidence strongly supports the central involvement of the human medial temporal lobes (MTL) in storing and retrieving memories for recently experienced events. However, a critical remaining question regards exactly how the hippocampus and surrounding cortex represents spatiotemporal context defining an event in memory. Competing accounts suggest that this process may be accomplished by the following: (1) an overall increase in neural similarity of representations underlying spatial and temporal context, (2) a differentiation of competing spatiotemporal representations, or (3) a combination of the two processes, with different subregions performing these two functions within the MTL. To address these competing proposals, we used high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging targeting the MTL along with a multivariate pattern similarity approach with 19 participants. While undergoing imaging, participants performed a task in which they retrieved spatial and temporal contextual representations from a recently learned experience. Results showed that successfully retrieving spatiotemporal context defining an episode involved a decrease in pattern similarity between putative spatial and temporal contextual representations in hippocampal subfields CA2/CA3/DG, whereas the parahippocampal cortex (PHC) showed the opposite pattern. These findings could not be accounted for by differences in univariate activations for complete versus partial retrieval nor differences in correlations for correct or incorrect retrieval. Together, these data suggest that the CA2/CA3/DG serves to differentiate competing contextual representations, whereas the PHC stores a comparatively integrated trace of scene-specific context, both of which likely play important roles in successful episodic memory retrieval.

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