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Fast track to the neocortex: A memory engram in the posterior parietal cortex.

Svenja BrodtS GaisJonas BeckM ErbK SchefflerM Schönauer
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2019)
Models of systems memory consolidation postulate a fast-learning hippocampal store and a slowly developing, stable neocortical store. Accordingly, early neocortical contributions to memory are deemed to reflect a hippocampus-driven online reinstatement of encoding activity. In contrast, we found that learning rapidly engenders an enduring memory engram in the human posterior parietal cortex. We assessed microstructural plasticity via diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging as well as functional brain activity in an object-location learning task. We detected neocortical plasticity as early as 1 hour after learning and found that it was learning specific, enabled correct recall, and overlapped with memory-related functional activity. These microstructural changes persisted over 12 hours. Our results suggest that new traces can be rapidly encoded into the parietal cortex, challenging views of a slow-learning neocortex.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • diffusion weighted
  • contrast enhanced
  • functional connectivity
  • blood pressure
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance
  • healthcare
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