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Shared memories reveal shared structure in neural activity across individuals.

Janice ChenYuan Chang LeongChristopher J HoneyChung H YongKenneth A NormanUri Hasson
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2016)
Our lives revolve around sharing experiences and memories with others. When different people recount the same events, how similar are their underlying neural representations? Participants viewed a 50-min movie, then verbally described the events during functional MRI, producing unguided detailed descriptions lasting up to 40 min. As each person spoke, event-specific spatial patterns were reinstated in default-network, medial-temporal, and high-level visual areas. Individual event patterns were both highly discriminable from one another and similar among people, suggesting consistent spatial organization. In many high-order areas, patterns were more similar between people recalling the same event than between recall and perception, indicating systematic reshaping of percept into memory. These results reveal the existence of a common spatial organization for memories in high-level cortical areas, where encoded information is largely abstracted beyond sensory constraints, and that neural patterns during perception are altered systematically across people into shared memory representations for real-life events.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • functional connectivity
  • computed tomography
  • resting state
  • dna methylation