Predicting memory from study-related brain activity
Sucheta Chakravarty, Yvonne Chen, Jeremy B. Caplan
Abstract
For both basic and applied reasons, an important goal is to identify brain activity present while people study materials that enable us to predict whether they will remember those materials. We show that this is possible with the conventional event-related potential "subsequent-memory-effect" signals as well as with machine learning classifiers, but only to a small degree. This is in line with behavioral research, which supports many determinants of memory apart from the cognitive processes during study.
Topics & Concepts
Cognitive psychologyPsychologyCognitionNeuroscienceBrain activity and meditationComputer scienceCognitive scienceElectroencephalographyMemory Processes and InfluencesEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeural dynamics and brain function