Brain electrophysiological responses associated with the retrieval of temporal and spatial contexts in episodic memory
Episodic memory allows us to remember three main elements regarding an event: what (it is), where (it is in space), and when (it appears). The brain’s electrical activity signaling the occurrence of these processes has been studied separately, revealing different patterns of ERP components and chang...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioural brain research 2022-10, Vol.435, p.114057-114057, Article 114057 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Episodic memory allows us to remember three main elements regarding an event: what (it is), where (it is in space), and when (it appears). The brain’s electrical activity signaling the occurrence of these processes has been studied separately, revealing different patterns of ERP components and changes in the EEG theta band amplitude. However, how these patterns signal the retrieval of the temporal and spatial contexts of the same episode is unknown. The objective of this study was to evaluate the ERP components and the EEG theta band in association to the retrieval of the what, where, and when of the same episode through a source memory task. Three types of trials were identified here: total retrieval (what, where, and when), spatial retrieval (what and where), and correct rejections (correctly identified as new items). Attentional components, N200 and P300, and theta band were sensitive to the amount of information retrieved from episodic memory. Total retrieval and spatial trials elicited higher mean amplitude of FN400 and LPC, familiarity and recollection markers, respectively, than correct rejections. Our results suggest that early attention mechanisms can discern the strength of retrieval; in turn, familiarity and recollection mechanisms participate in the retrieval of the main contexts of episodic memory, but not in a cumulative way.
•Event-related potentials are useful markers of episodic memory: the FN400 and the LPC•Retrieving the spatial and temporal context simultaneously evoked FN400•The LPC increases its amplitude with the retrieval of spatial and temporal contexts•Theta band indicated the amount of information retrieved from episodic memory•Early components suggest attentional participation of context retrieval |
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ISSN: | 0166-4328 1872-7549 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bbr.2022.114057 |