Constructing and Forgetting Temporal Context in the Human Cerebral Cortex

How does information from seconds earlier affect neocortical responses to new input? We found that when two groups of participants heard the same sentence in a narrative, preceded by different contexts, the neural responses of each group were initially different but gradually fell into alignment. We...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNeuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Vol. 106; no. 4; pp. 675 - 686.e11
Main Authors Chien, Hsiang-Yun Sherry, Honey, Christopher J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 20.05.2020
Elsevier Limited
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Summary:How does information from seconds earlier affect neocortical responses to new input? We found that when two groups of participants heard the same sentence in a narrative, preceded by different contexts, the neural responses of each group were initially different but gradually fell into alignment. We observed a hierarchical gradient: sensory cortices aligned most quickly, followed by mid-level regions, while some higher-order cortical regions took more than 10 seconds to align. What computations explain this hierarchical temporal organization? Linear integration models predict that regions that are slower to integrate new information should also be slower to forget old information. However, we found that higher-order regions could rapidly forget prior context. The data from the cortical hierarchy were instead captured by a model in which each region maintains a temporal context representation that is nonlinearly integrated with input at each moment, and this integration is gated by local prediction error. •Distinct cortical responses when the same stimulus is preceded by different contexts•Responses align as common input continues: sensory cortex, then higher-order cortex•Cortical regions maintain a distributed and hierarchical representation of context•Distributed cortical memory is gated and prior context can be flexibly forgotten Chien and Honey measured how sequential information in a spoken narrative is integrated and separated in the human cerebral cortex. They observed a hierarchical representation of temporal context, distributed across the cortex. Computational modeling suggests the distributed context representation is flexibly updated or reset based on surprise.
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Author contributions (CRediT taxonomy): Conceptualization: HSC and CJH; Methodology: HSC and CJH; Formal Analysis: HSC and CJH; Investigation: HSC and CJH; Resources: HSC and CJH; Writing – Original Draft: HSC and CJH; Visualization: HSC; Supervision: CJH.; Funding Acquisition, HSC and CJH.
ISSN:0896-6273
1097-4199
1097-4199
DOI:10.1016/j.neuron.2020.02.013