No consolidation without representation: Correspondence between neural and psychological representations in recent and remote memory
Memory systems consolidation is often conceived as the linear, time-dependent, neurobiological shift of memory from hippocampal-cortical to cortico-cortical dependency. We argue that contrary to this unidirectional view of memory reorganization, information about events may be retained in multiple f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2021-07, Vol.109 (14), p.2239-2255 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Memory systems consolidation is often conceived as the linear, time-dependent, neurobiological shift of memory from hippocampal-cortical to cortico-cortical dependency. We argue that contrary to this unidirectional view of memory reorganization, information about events may be retained in multiple forms (e.g., event-specific sensory-near episodic memory, event-specific gist information, event-general schematic information, or abstract semantic memory). These representations can all form at the time of the event and may continue to coexist for long durations. Their relative strength, composition, and dominance of expression change with time and experience, with task demands, and through their dynamic interaction with one another. These different psychological mnemonic representations depend on distinct functional and structural neurobiological substrates such that there is a neural-psychological representation correspondence (NPRC) among them. We discuss how the dynamics of psychological memory representations are reflected in multiple levels of neurobiological markers and their interactions. By this view, there are only variations of synaptic consolidation and memory dynamics without assuming a distinct systems consolidation process.
There is no memory systems consolidation—the uni-directional, time-dependent change only in neural representation from hippocampus to neocortex. Instead, multiple neural representations are formed at acquisition and altered via dynamic, interactive processes throughout a memory’s life with corresponding modifications in psychological representation and expression. |
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ISSN: | 0896-6273 1097-4199 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.04.025 |