Current Biology
Volume 22, Issue 17, 11 September 2012, Pages 1622-1627
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Shaping of Object Representations in the Human Medial Temporal Lobe Based on Temporal Regularities

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Summary

Regularities are gradually represented in cortex after extensive experience [1], and yet they can influence behavior after minimal exposure [2, 3]. What kind of representations support such rapid statistical learning? The medial temporal lobe (MTL) can represent information from even a single experience [4], making it a good candidate system for assisting in initial learning about regularities. We combined anatomical segmentation of the MTL, high-resolution fMRI, and multivariate pattern analysis to identify representations of objects in cortical and hippocampal areas of human MTL, assessing how these representations were shaped by exposure to regularities. Subjects viewed a continuous visual stream containing hidden temporal relationships—pairs of objects that reliably appeared nearby in time. We compared the pattern of blood oxygen level-dependent activity evoked by each object before and after this exposure, and found that perirhinal cortex, parahippocampal cortex, subiculum, CA1, and CA2/CA3/dentate gyrus (CA2/3/DG) encoded regularities by increasing the representational similarity of their constituent objects. Most regions exhibited bidirectional associative shaping, whereas CA2/3/DG represented regularities in a forward-looking predictive manner. These findings suggest that object representations in MTL come to mirror the temporal structure of the environment, supporting rapid and incidental statistical learning.

Highlights

► Voxel patterns provide a window into how MTL represents object regularities ► Incidental exposure to objects paired in time increases similarity of their patterns ► Such changes occur in both cortical areas and hippocampal subfields of human MTL ► Regularities are represented in a forward-looking predictive manner in CA2/3/DG

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