Abstract
Episodic memory entails the storage of events together with their spatio-temporal context and retrieval comprises the subjective experience of a link between the person who remembers and the episode itself. We used an encoding procedure with mobile-phones to generate experimentally-controlled episodes in the real world: object-images were sent to the participants' phone, with encoding durations up to 3 weeks. In other groups of participants, the same objects were encoded during the exploration of a virtual town (45 min) or using a standard laboratory paradigm, with pairs of object/place-images presented in a sequence of unrelated trials (15 min). At retrieval, we tested subjective memory for the objects (remember/familiar) and memory for the context (place and time). We found that accurate and confident context-memory increased the likelihood of “remember” responses, in all encoding contexts. We also tested the participants' ability to judge the temporal-order of the encoded episodes. Using a model of temporal similarity, we demonstrate scale-invariant properties of order-retrieval, but also highlight the contribution of non-chronological factors. We conclude that the mechanisms governing episodic memory retrieval can operate across a wide range of spatio-temporal contexts and that the multi-dimensional nature of the episodic traces contributes to the subjective experience of retrieval.
Highlights
Episodic memory entails the storage of events together with their spatio-temporal context and retrieval comprises the subjective experience of a link between the person who remembers and the episode itself
Memory encoding entailed a small Virtual reality (VR) environment (2 rooms, with windows facing on an external courtyard) and the results showed that context details could be reliably retrieved only when the memory status of the object was Remember
We investigated episodic memory retrieval following encoding in three contexts that comprised vastly different spatio-temporal scales and levels of naturalism
Summary
Episodic memory entails the storage of events together with their spatio-temporal context and retrieval comprises the subjective experience of a link between the person who remembers and the episode itself. This may include presenting participants with simple visual shapes and measuring perceptual or motor performance or using lists of isolated words to study specific memory processes[1,2] While this approach provided us with an impressive amount of knowledge about cognitive functions, and their underlying neural bases, impoverished laboratory conditions may miss many relevant factors that contribute to behavior in the real world. Static images comprise objects-in-context and allow studying how contextual information and prior knowledge about the spatial layout of real-world environments affect the allocation of perceptual/attentional r esources[6,7] or memory processes[3,8] Dynamic stimuli, such as movies, add the temporal dimension and can entail a coherent flow of information over time that, again, has been found to constrain perceptual and memory processes[9,10]. Overall, encoding in VR has been associated with an increase of memory p erformance[22,23,24]; see a lso[25] for review
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