4.3 Article

The hippocampus supports high-precision binding in visual working memory

Journal

HIPPOCAMPUS
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 217-230

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hipo.23401

Keywords

fMRI; hippocampus; lesions; memory precision; visual working memory

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01EY025999]

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Research suggests that the hippocampus is critical not only for long-term episodic memory, but also for supporting memory over brief delays, especially in complex high-precision binding. Patients with hippocampal damage show impairments in retrieving color-location details, while neural activity in healthy subjects is directly related to the precision of bindings.
It is well established that the hippocampus is critical for long-term episodic memory, but a growing body of research suggests that it also plays a critical role in supporting memory over very brief delays as measured in tests of working memory (WM). However, the circumstances under which the hippocampus is necessary for WM and the specific processes that it supports remain controversial. We propose that the hippocampus supports WM by binding together high-precision properties of an event, and we test this claim by examining the precision of color-location bindings in a visual WM task in which participants report the precise color of studied items using a continuous color wheel. Amnestic patients with hippocampal damage were significantly impaired at retrieving these colors after a 1-s delay, and these impairments reflected a reduction in the precision of those memories rather than increases in total memory failures or binding errors. Moreover, a parallel fMRI study in healthy subjects revealed that neural activity in the head and body of the hippocampus was directly related to the precision of visual WM decisions. Together, these results indicate that the hippocampus is critical in complex high-precision binding that supports memory over brief delays.

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