Abstract

Recalling the past, thinking about the future, and navigating in the world are linked with a brain structure called the hippocampus. Precisely, how the hippocampus enables these critical cognitive functions is still debated. The strategies people use to perform tasks associated with these functions have been under-studied, and yet, such information could augment our understanding of the associated cognitive processes and neural substrates. Here, we devised and deployed an in-depth protocol to examine the explicit strategies used by 217 participants to perform four naturalistic tasks widely acknowledged to be hippocampal-dependent, namely, those assessing scene imagination, autobiographical memory recall, future thinking, and spatial navigation. In addition, we also investigated strategy use for three laboratory-based memory tasks, one of which is held to be hippocampal-dependent – concrete verbal paired associates (VPA) – and two tasks, which are likely hippocampal-independent – abstract VPA and the dead or alive semantic memory test. We found that scene visual imagery was the dominant strategy not only when mentally imagining scenes, but also during autobiographical memory recall, when thinking about the future and during navigation. Moreover, scene visual imagery strategies were used most frequently during the concrete VPA task, whereas verbal strategies were most prevalent for the abstract VPA task and the dead or alive semantic memory task. The ubiquity of specifically scene visual imagery use across a range of tasks may attest to its, perhaps underappreciated, importance in facilitating cognition, while also aligning with perspectives that emphasize a key role for the hippocampus in constructing scene imagery.

Highlights

  • We recall our past experiences in the form of autobiographical memories, and are able to imagine potential future events

  • We found that scene visual imagery was the dominant strategy when mentally imagining scenes, and during autobiographical memory recall, when thinking about the future and during navigation – all naturalistic tasks associated with the hippocampus

  • Scene visual imagery strategies were used during concrete VPA, a task linked to the hippocampus, whereas verbal strategies were most prevalent for tasks thought to be hippocampal-independent, namely, abstract VPA and the dead or alive semantic memory task

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Summary

Introduction

We recall our past experiences in the form of autobiographical memories, and are able to imagine potential future events. One suggestion is that what these cognitive functions have in common is the prominent involvement of scene visual imagery (Hassabis and Maguire, 2007; Maguire and Mullally, 2013; see Rubin and Umanath, 2015; Robin, 2018 for related theoretical viewpoints). Neuroimaging studies have consistently reported hippocampal engagement when healthy participants imagine visual scenes in comparison to, for example, single objects (Hassabis et al, 2007b; Andrews-Hanna et al, 2010; Zeidman and Maguire, 2016; Barry et al, 2018; Clark et al, 2018; Dalton et al, 2018; Palombo et al, 2018; Robin, 2018)

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