[HTML][HTML] Dynamic changes in neural representations underlie the repetition effect on false memory
Restudying word lists (eg, dream, awake, and bed) strengthens true memory of the studied
words and reduces false memory for unstudied but semantically related lures (eg, sleep).
Yet, the neural mechanisms involved in this repetition effect on false memory remain
unclear. Possible mechanisms involve item-specific and semantic neural representations at
encoding, and the memory strength between encoding and retrieval. This study first
replicated the behavioral results (Exp. 1) and then investigated various neural mechanisms …
words and reduces false memory for unstudied but semantically related lures (eg, sleep).
Yet, the neural mechanisms involved in this repetition effect on false memory remain
unclear. Possible mechanisms involve item-specific and semantic neural representations at
encoding, and the memory strength between encoding and retrieval. This study first
replicated the behavioral results (Exp. 1) and then investigated various neural mechanisms …
Abstract
Restudying word lists (e.g., dream, awake, and bed) strengthens true memory of the studied words and reduces false memory for unstudied but semantically related lures (e.g., sleep). Yet, the neural mechanisms involved in this repetition effect on false memory remain unclear. Possible mechanisms involve item-specific and semantic neural representations at encoding, and the memory strength between encoding and retrieval. This study first replicated the behavioral results (Exp. 1) and then investigated various neural mechanisms by using slow event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and representational similarity analysis (Exp. 2). Behavioral results confirmed that restudy improved true memory and reduced false memory. The fMRI results showed that restudy induced item-specific neural representations at encoding in the left occipital pole, but reduced neural overlap between semantic representations at encoding in the left temporal pole. Individual differences in these two encoding neural mechanisms were correlated with the behavioral measure of false memory, with greater restudy-induced representational changes at encoding (item-specific neural representations and reduced neural overlap between semantic representations) being associated with lower false memory. Moreover, restudy enhanced the memory strength between encoding and retrieval in the visuoparietal cortex but reduced it in the frontal cortex. These findings suggest that dynamic changes in neural representations underlie the repetition effect on false memory, supporting a dual-coding neural framework.
Elsevier