Litcius/Paper detail

Theta rhythmicity governs human behavior and hippocampal signals during memory-dependent tasks

Marije Ter Wal, Juan Linde‐Domingo, Julia Lifanov, Frédéric Roux, Luca D. Kolibius, Stephanie Gollwitzer, Johannes Lang, Hajo M. Hamer, David T. Rollings, Vijay Sawlani, Ramesh Chelvarajah, Bernhard P. Staresina, Simon Hanslmayr, Maria Wimber

2021Nature Communications58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Memory formation and reinstatement are thought to lock to the hippocampal theta rhythm, predicting that encoding and retrieval processes appear rhythmic themselves. Here, we show that rhythmicity can be observed in behavioral responses from memory tasks, where participants indicate, using button presses, the timing of encoding and recall of cue-object associative memories. We find no evidence for rhythmicity in button presses for visual tasks using the same stimuli, or for questions about already retrieved objects. The oscillations for correctly remembered trials center in the slow theta frequency range (1-5 Hz). Using intracranial EEG recordings, we show that the memory task induces temporally extended phase consistency in hippocampal local field potentials at slow theta frequencies, but significantly more for remembered than forgotten trials, providing a potential mechanistic underpinning for the theta oscillations found in behavioral responses.

Topics & Concepts

Hippocampal formationNeuroscienceLocal field potentialEpisodic memoryRecallEncoding (memory)RhythmPsychologyCognitive psychologyContent-addressable memoryElectroencephalographyTheta rhythmObject (grammar)CognitionComputer sciencePhysicsArtificial intelligenceAcousticsArtificial neural networkMemory and Neural MechanismsNeural dynamics and brain functionNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research