Abstract
Remembering information from continuous past episodes is a complex task. On the one hand, we must be able to recall events in a highly accurate way that often includes exact timing; on the other hand, we can ignore irrelevant details and skip to events of interest. We here track continuous episodes, consisting of different sub-events, as they are recalled from memory. In behavioral and MEG data, we show that memory replay is temporally compressed and proceeds in a forward direction. Neural replay is characterized by the reinstatement of temporal patterns from encoding. These fragments of activity reappear on a compressed timescale. Herein, the replay of sub-events takes longer than the transition from one sub-event to another. This identifies episodic memory replay as a dynamic process in which participants replay fragments of fine-grained temporal patterns and are able to skip flexibly across sub-events.
Original language | English |
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DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 16 May 2018 |
Publication series
Name | bioRxiv |
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Publisher | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press |
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Speed of time-compressed forward replay flexibly changes in human episodic memory
Hanslmayr, S. (Creator) & Michelmann, S. (Creator), University of Birmingham, 16 Oct 2018
DOI: 10.25500/eData.bham.00000254
Dataset