Human intracranial high-frequency activity maps episodic memory formation in space and time

Noninvasive neuroimaging studies have revealed a network of brain regions that activate during human memory encoding; however, the relative timing of such activations remains unknown. Here we used intracranially recorded high-frequency activity (HFA) to first identify regions that activate during su...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Fla.), 2014-01, Vol.85 (2), p.834-843
Hauptverfasser: Burke, John F., Long, Nicole M., Zaghloul, Kareem A., Sharan, Ashwini D., Sperling, Michael R., Kahana, Michael J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Noninvasive neuroimaging studies have revealed a network of brain regions that activate during human memory encoding; however, the relative timing of such activations remains unknown. Here we used intracranially recorded high-frequency activity (HFA) to first identify regions that activate during successful encoding. Then, we leveraged the high-temporal precision of HFA to investigate the timing of such activations. We found that memory encoding invokes two spatiotemporally distinct activations: early increases in HFA that involve the ventral visual pathway as well as the medial temporal lobe and late increases in HFA that involve the left inferior frontal gyrus, left posterior parietal cortex, and left ventrolateral temporal cortex. We speculate that these activations reflect higher-order visual processing and top-down modulation of attention/semantic information, respectively. •Human memory formation involves early and late neural activations.•Early activations included higher-order visual areas culminating in the hippocampus.•Late activations included left neocortical regions involved in semantic processing.
ISSN:1053-8119
1095-9572
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.06.067