Neural signatures for temporal order memory in the macaque medial posterior parietal cortex
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Episodic memory involves encoding and remembering the order of events experienced over time. Previous work examining the mechanisms of temporal-order memories has focused on the hippocampus and prefrontal cortices but has largely ignored the memory ensembles in the medial posterior parietal cortex (mPPC). Combining in vivo multi-unit electrophysiology and a temporal-order judgment task with cinematic material in the macaque, we find that mPPC neuronal activity reflects temporal context both during encoding and recall. During learning, mPPC neuronal ensembles encode the temporal information as well as contextual information embedded in the videos, whereas at retrieval these neurons fire in synchrony prior to memory-guided decisions. Moreover, the similarity between encoding and retrieval correlates with the animal’s performance. A control experiment further ruled out eye saccades, fixation, and scan path for their confounding roles in the neural results. Together, these data suggest that neurons in mPPC track the passage of time and contextual changes, thereby orchestrating for successful temporal-order memories at retrieval.
SIGNIFICANCE
Remembering the temporal order of events is a vital function of the brain. This study provides the first evidence for the retrieval of temporal order of episodes at both single neuron and ensemble levels in the primate parietal cortex. The study’s key breakthrough is the revelation that ensembles of time perceptive neurons, acting as “temporal context cells”, can encode a spectrum of time constants and contexts for the experienced past and subsequently utilize this temporal record to discriminate the chronological order of past experiences. These results enhance theoretical frameworks for how encoded temporal past is maintained and reconstructed during memory retrieval.