Abstract

Intuitively, we assume that we remember episodes better when we actively participated in them and were not mere observers. Independently of this, we can recall episodes from either the first-person perspective (1pp) or the third-person perspective (3pp). In this functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, we tested whether agency and perspective modulate neural activity during memory retrieval and subsequently enhance memory performance. Subjects encoded a set of different episodes by either imitating or only observing videos that showed short toy stories. A week later, we conducted fMRI and cued episodic retrieval by presenting the original videos, or slightly modified versions thereof, from 1pp or from 3pp. The hippocampal formation was sensitive to self-performed vs. only observed actions only when there was an episodic mismatch. In a post-fMRI memory test a history of self-performance did not improve behavioral memory performance. However, modified videos were often (falsely) accepted as showing truly experienced episodes when: (i) they were already presented in this modified version during fMRI or (ii) they were presented in their original form during fMRI but from 3pp. While the overall effect of modification was strong, the effects of perspective and agency were more subtle. Together, our findings demonstrate that self-performance and self-perspective modulate the strength of a memory trace in different ways. Even when memory performance remains the same for different agentive states, the brain is capable of detecting mismatching information. Re-experiencing the latter impairs memory performance as well as retrieving encoded episodes from 3pp.

Highlights

  • Episodic memories enable us to retrieve information about events from our personal past, including when and where they were experienced (Tulving, 2002)

  • We used two three-way repeated measures ANOVA (rmANOVA) based on aligned ranks with the factor stimulus MODIFICATIONfMRI, presentation mode PERSPECTIVE (1pp, 3pp) and pre-functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) training mode AGENCY

  • We found a significant main effect for the factor MODIFICATIONfMRI [F(1,34) = 21.59, p < 0.001] indicating that after repeatedly watching modifiedfMRI videos of a story (Mmod = 1.27 ± 0.04), participants were less likely to accept originals videos as truly experienced compared to after reexperiencing originalsfMRI during fMRI (Mori = 1.20 ± 0.04)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Episodic memories enable us to retrieve information about events from our personal past, including when and where they were experienced (Tulving, 2002). We have learned that episodic memories are prone to change and decay (Roediger and Butler, 2011; Nader, 2015; Lee et al, 2017). This slow and progressive modification process is presumably fueled by retrieval. In an ever-changing world, a prerequisite to maintain the efficiency and validity of such internal models is to open them for the integration of new experiences This updating process is initiated by prediction errors (Exton-McGuinness et al, 2015; Fernández et al, 2016). Episodic memories are exploited in the course of envisaging the future but are gradually updated by matching them to the current experiences when retrieved

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call