Abstract

Investigating human consciousness based on brain activity alone is a key challenge in cognitive neuroscience. One of its central facets, the ability to form autobiographical memories, has been investigated through several fMRI studies that have revealed a pattern of activity across a network of frontal, parietal, and medial temporal lobe regions when participants view personal photographs, as opposed to when they view photographs from someone else’s life. Here, our goal was to attempt to decode when participants were re-experiencing an entire event, captured on video from a first-person perspective, relative to a very similar event experienced by someone else. Participants were asked to sit passively in a wheelchair while a researcher pushed them around a local mall. A small wearable camera was mounted on each participant, in order to capture autobiographical videos of the visit from a first-person perspective. One week later, participants were scanned while they passively viewed different categories of videos; some were autobiographical, while others were not. A machine-learning model was able to successfully classify the video categories above chance, both within and across participants, suggesting that there is a shared mechanism differentiating autobiographical experiences from non-autobiographical ones. Moreover, the classifier brain maps revealed that the fronto-parietal network, mid-temporal regions and extrastriate cortex were critical for differentiating between autobiographical and non-autobiographical memories. We argue that this novel paradigm captures the true nature of autobiographical memories, and is well suited to patients (e.g., with brain injuries) who may be unable to respond reliably to traditional experimental stimuli.

Highlights

  • One of the key facets of human consciousness is autobiographical memory

  • A series of analyses were performed to evaluate how accurately a whole-brain Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifier could discriminate between the fMRI activity associated with three naturalistic video categories

  • The mean classification accuracies from 10 permutations of this analysis with randomly reshuffled video labels are depicted in orange

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Summary

Introduction

One of the key facets of human consciousness is autobiographical memory. This ability, to form and later re-experience personal events is, to a large extent, what gives us a sense of our personal identity. An extant challenge for cognitive neuroscience, is to decode the contents of memories from brain activity alone, without recourse to any behavioural response. Several studies have shown that similar conscious experiences elicit a common pattern of neural activity across individuals [1,2], suggesting a solution to this challenge. We recorded real-life autobiographical events in a naturalistic setting and investigated whether the fMRI responses elicited while viewing these personal experiences can be differentiated from those elicited while viewing similar, but non-personal events

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