Litcius/Paper detail

EEG biomarkers of free recall

B.S. Katerman, Y. Li, Jesse Kendall Pazdera, Colm Keane, Michael J. Kahana

2021NeuroImage19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Brain activity in the moments leading up to spontaneous verbal recall provide a window into the cognitive processes underlying memory retrieval. But these same recordings also subsume neural signals unrelated to mnemonic retrieval, such as response-related motor activity. Here we examined spectral EEG biomarkers of memory retrieval under an extreme manipulation of mnemonic demands: subjects either recalled items after a few seconds or after several days. This manipulation helped to isolate EEG components specifically related to long-term memory retrieval. In the moments immediately preceding recall we observed increased theta (4-8 Hz) power (+T), decreased alpha (8-20 Hz) power (-A), and increased gamma (40-128 Hz) power (+G), with this spectral pattern (+T-A + G) distinguishing the long-delay and immediate recall conditions. As subjects vocalized the same set of studied words in both conditions, we interpret the spectral +T-A + G as a biomarker of episodic memory retrieval.

Topics & Concepts

MnemonicRecallElectroencephalographyPsychologyEpisodic memoryCognitionFree recallSet (abstract data type)Brain activity and meditationNeuroscienceCognitive psychologyAudiologyComputer scienceMedicineProgramming languageMemory and Neural MechanismsEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeural dynamics and brain function