scholarly journals Mnemonic prediction errors bias hippocampal states

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oded Bein ◽  
Katherine Duncan ◽  
Lila Davachi

AbstractIn situations when our experience violates our predictions, it is adaptive to upregulate encoding of novel information, while down-weighting retrieval of erroneous memory predictions to promote an updated representation of the world. We asked whether mnemonic prediction errors promote distinct hippocampal processing ‘states’ by leveraging recent results showing that encoding and retrieval processes are supported by distinct patterns of connectivity, or ‘states’, across hippocampal subfields. During fMRI scanning, participants were cued to retrieve well-learned room-images and were then presented with either an image identical to the learned room or a modified version (1-4 changes). We found that CA1-entorhinal connectivity increased, and CA1-CA3 connectivity decreased, with the number of changes to the learned rooms. Further, stronger memory predictions measured in CA1 during the cue correlated with the CA1-entorhinal connectivity increase in response to violations. Our findings provide a mechanism by which mnemonic prediction errors may drive memory updating - by biasing hippocampal states.

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oded Bein ◽  
Katherine Duncan ◽  
Lila Davachi

Abstract When our experience violates our predictions, it is adaptive to upregulate encoding of novel information, while down-weighting retrieval of erroneous memory predictions to promote an updated representation of the world. We asked whether mnemonic prediction errors promote hippocampal encoding versus retrieval states, as marked by distinct network connectivity between hippocampal subfields. During fMRI scanning, participants were cued to internally retrieve well-learned complex room-images and were then presented with either an identical or a modified image (0-4 changes). In the left hemisphere, we find that CA1-entorhinal connectivity increases, and CA1-CA3 connectivity decreases, with the number of changes. Further, in the left CA1, the similarity between activity patterns during cued-retrieval of the learned room and during the image is lower when the image includes changes, consistent with a prediction error signal in CA1. Our findings provide a mechanism by which mnemonic prediction errors may drive memory updating—by biasing hippocampal states.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 1384
Author(s):  
Fabienne Picard ◽  
Peter Bossaerts ◽  
Fabrice Bartolomei

Ecstatic epilepsy is a rare form of focal epilepsy in which the aura (beginning of the seizures) consists of a blissful state of mental clarity/feeling of certainty. Such a state has also been described as a “religious” or mystical experience. While this form of epilepsy has long been recognized as a temporal lobe epilepsy, we have accumulated evidence converging toward the location of the symptomatogenic zone in the dorsal anterior insula during the 10 last years. The neurocognitive hypothesis for the genesis of a mental clarity is the suppression of the interoceptive prediction errors and of the unexpected surprise associated with any incoming internal or external signal, usually processed by the dorsal anterior insula. This mimics a perfect prediction of the world and induces a feeling of certainty. The ecstatic epilepsy is thus an amazing model for the role of anterior insula in uncertainty and surprise.


2000 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 965-976 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moshe Naveh-Benjamin ◽  
Fergus I. M. Craik ◽  
Dana Gavrilescu ◽  
Nicole D. Anderson

NeuroImage ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 568-586 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanislau Hrybouski ◽  
Melanie MacGillivray ◽  
Yushan Huang ◽  
Christopher R. Madan ◽  
Rawle Carter ◽  
...  

Cortex ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Logie ◽  
Sergio Della Sala ◽  
Sarah E. MacPherson ◽  
Janine Cooper

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