| Literature DB >> 33285563 |
Wilma A Bainbridge1,2, Elizabeth H Hall2,3,4, Chris I Baker2.
Abstract
During memory recall and visual imagery, reinstatement is thought to occur as an echoing of the neural patterns during encoding. However, the precise information in these recall traces is relatively unknown, with previous work primarily investigating either broad distinctions or specific images, rarely bridging these levels of information. Using ultra-high-field (7T) functional magnetic resonance imaging with an item-based visual recall task, we conducted an in-depth comparison of encoding and recall along a spectrum of granularity, from coarse (scenes, objects) to mid (e.g., natural, manmade scenes) to fine (e.g., living room, cupcake) levels. In the scanner, participants viewed a trial-unique item, and after a distractor task, visually imagined the initial item. During encoding, we observed decodable information at all levels of granularity in category-selective visual cortex. In contrast, information during recall was primarily at the coarse level with fine-level information in some areas; there was no evidence of mid-level information. A closer look revealed segregation between voxels showing the strongest effects during encoding and those during recall, and peaks of encoding-recall similarity extended anterior to category-selective cortex. Collectively, these results suggest visual recall is not merely a reactivation of encoding patterns, displaying a different representational structure and localization from encoding, despite some overlap. Published by Oxford University Press 2020.Entities:
Keywords: 7T fMRI; encoding–recall similarity; objects; representational similarity analyses; scenes
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33285563 PMCID: PMC7945020 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhaa329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357