Multivoxel pattern similarity suggests the integration of temporal duration in hippocampal event sequence representations
Recent rodent work suggests the hippocampus may provide a temporal representation of event sequences, in which the order of events and the interval durations between them are encoded. There is, however, limited human evidence for the latter, in particular whether the hippocampus processes duration i...
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Veröffentlicht in: | NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Fla.), 2018-09, Vol.178, p.136-146 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent rodent work suggests the hippocampus may provide a temporal representation of event sequences, in which the order of events and the interval durations between them are encoded. There is, however, limited human evidence for the latter, in particular whether the hippocampus processes duration information pertaining to the passage of time rather than qualitative or quantitative changes in event content. We scanned participants while they made match-mismatch judgements on each trial between a study sequence of events and a subsequent test sequence. Participants explicitly remembered event order or interval duration information (Experiment 1), or monitored order only, with duration being manipulated implicitly (Experiment 2). Hippocampal study-test pattern similarity was significantly reduced by changes to order or duration in mismatch trials, even when duration was processed implicitly. Our findings suggest the human hippocampus processes short intervals within sequences and support the idea that duration information is integrated into hippocampal mnemonic representations.
•Hippocampal activity patterns are sensitive to temporal order and duration.•Duration sensitivity is not dependant on explicit temporal processing.•Findings support a temporal representation of event sequences in the hippocampus. |
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ISSN: | 1053-8119 1095-9572 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.05.036 |