Litcius/Paper detail

Cortico-ocular coupling in the service of episodic memory formation

Tzvetan Popov, Tobias Staudigl

2023Progress in Neurobiology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Encoding of visual information is a necessary requirement for most types of episodic memories. In search for a neural signature of memory formation, amplitude modulation of neural activity has been repeatedly shown to correlate with and suggested to be functionally involved in successful memory encoding. We here report a complementary view on why and how brain activity relates to memory, indicating a functional role of cortico-ocular interactions for episodic memory formation. Recording simultaneous magnetoencephalography and eye tracking in 35 human participants, we demonstrate that gaze variability and amplitude modulations of alpha/beta oscillations (10-20 Hz) in visual cortex covary and predict subsequent memory performance between and within participants. Amplitude variation during pre-stimulus baseline was associated with gaze direction variability, echoing the co-variation observed during scene encoding. We conclude that encoding of visual information engages unison coupling between oculomotor and visual areas in the service of memory formation.

Topics & Concepts

MagnetoencephalographyNeurosciencePsychologyGazeEpisodic memoryEncoding (memory)Visual memoryStimulus (psychology)Visual short-term memoryVisual cortexCognitive psychologyElectroencephalographyCognitionPsychoanalysisNeural dynamics and brain functionVisual perception and processing mechanismsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research
Cortico-ocular coupling in the service of episodic memory formation | Litcius