Effective connectivity of the anterior hippocampus predicts recollection confidence during natural memory retrieval
Adult
Male
0301 basic medicine
1300 Biochemistry
Science
Memory, Episodic
150
Video Recording
Voluntary
Activation
Genetics and Molecular Biology
Parietal Cortex
Hippocampus
Article
03 medical and health sciences
Information
Parietal Lobe
616
Connectome
Humans
3100 Physics and Astronomy
Attention
Metacognitive Ability
Q
Default Mode Network
1600 Chemistry
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Neural Basis
Mental Recall
Involuntary Autobiographical Memories
Perception
Female
Cues
info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/500
DOI:
10.1038/s41467-018-07325-4
Publication Date:
2018-11-13T15:53:40Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
AbstractHuman interactions with the world are influenced by memories of recent events. This effect, often triggered by perceptual cues, occurs naturally and without conscious effort. However, the neuroscience of involuntary memory in a dynamic milieu has received much less attention than the mechanisms of voluntary retrieval with deliberate purpose. Here, we investigate the neural processes driven by naturalistic cues that relate to, and presumably trigger the retrieval of recent experiences. Viewing the continuation of recently viewed clips evokes greater bilateral activation in anterior hippocampus, precuneus and angular gyrus than naïve clips. While these regions manifest reciprocal connectivity, continued viewing specifically modulates the effective connectivity from the anterior hippocampus to the precuneus. The strength of this modulation predicts participants’ confidence in later voluntary recall of news details. Our study reveals network mechanisms of dynamic, involuntary memory retrieval and its relevance to metacognition in a rich context resembling everyday life.
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