Increasing stimulus similarity drives nonmonotonic representational change in hippocampus
Data files
Nov 01, 2021 version files 118.71 GB
Abstract
Studies of hippocampal learning have obtained seemingly contradictory results, with manipulations that increase coactivation of memories sometimes leading to differentiation of these memories, but sometimes not. These results could potentially be reconciled using the nonmonotonic plasticity hypothesis, which posits that representational change (memories moving apart or together) is a U-shaped function of the coactivation of these memories during learning. Testing this hypothesis requires manipulating coactivation over a wide enough range to reveal the full U-shape. To accomplish this, we used a novel neural network image synthesis procedure to create pairs of stimuli that varied parametrically in their similarity in high-level visual regions that provide input to the hippocampus. Sequences of these pairs were shown to human participants during high-resolution fMRI. As predicted, learning changed the representations of paired images in the dentate gyrus as a U-shaped function of image similarity, with neural differentiation occurring only for moderately similar images.
Methods
Please refer to the manuscript for methodological information.
Citation: Wammes, Jeffrey D., Kenneth A. Norman, and Nicholas B. Turk-Browne. "Increasing stimulus similarity drives nonmonotonic representational change in hippocampus." eLife.
Usage notes
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