Journal
CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhad092
Keywords
event segmentation; hippocampus; parahippocampal cortex; uncertainty; ventromedial prefrontal cortex
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This study provides a representational account of how cognitive maps support flexible generalization of knowledge across cognitive domains. Participants learned novel object locations in different virtual environments, and neural patterns in the hippocampus and vmPFC reflected the formation of a cognitive map. Twenty-four hours later, participants' preference response times were slower when transitioning between same- and different-environment triplets, with hippocampal spatial map coherence tracking this behavioral slowing.
Prominent theories posit that associative memory structures, known as cognitive maps, support flexible generalization of knowledge across cognitive domains. Here, we evince a representational account of cognitive map flexibility by quantifying how spatial knowledge formed one day was used predictively in a temporal sequence task 24 hours later, biasing both behavior and neural response. Participants learned novel object locations in distinct virtual environments. After learning, hippocampus and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) represented a cognitive map, wherein neural patterns became more similar for same-environment objects and more discriminable for different-environment objects. Twenty-four hours later, participants rated their preference for objects from spatial learning; objects were presented in sequential triplets from either the same or different environments. We found that preference response times were slower when participants transitioned between same- and different-environment triplets. Furthermore, hippocampal spatial map coherence tracked behavioral slowing at the implicit sequence transitions. At transitions, predictive reinstatement of virtual environments decreased in anterior parahippocampal cortex. In the absence of such predictive reinstatement after sequence transitions, hippocampus and vmPFC responses increased, accompanied by hippocampal-vmPFC functional decoupling that predicted individuals' behavioral slowing after a transition. Collectively, these findings reveal how expectations derived from spatial experience generalize to support temporal prediction.
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