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To update or to create? The influence of novelty and prior knowledge on memory networks

Melanie J. Sekeres, Judith Schomaker, Lynn Nadel, Dorothy Tse

2024Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Schemas are foundational mental structures shaped by experience. They influence behaviour, guide the encoding of new memories and are shaped by associated information. The adaptability of memory schemas facilitates the integration of new information that aligns with existing knowledge structures. First, we discuss how novel information consistent with an existing schema can be swiftly assimilated when presented. This cognitive updating is facilitated by the interaction between the hippocampus and the prefrontal cortex. Second, when novel information is inconsistent with the schema, it likely engages the hippocampus to encode the information as part of an episodic memory trace. Third, novelty may enhance hippocampal dopamine through either the locus coeruleus or ventral tegmental area pathways, with the pathway involved potentially depending on the type of novelty encountered. We propose a gradient theory of schema and novelty to elucidate the neural processes by which schema updating or novel memory traces are formed. It is likely that experiences vary along a familiarity-novelty continuum, and the degree to which new experiences are increasingly novel will guide whether memory for a new experience either integrates into an existing schema or prompts the creation of a new cognitive framework. This article is part of the theme issue 'Long-term potentiation: 50 years on'.

Topics & Concepts

NoveltySchema (genetic algorithms)Episodic memoryCognitive psychologyComputer sciencePrefrontal cortexCognitionCognitive scienceAdaptabilityPsychologyNeuroscienceInformation retrievalSocial psychologyEcologyBiologyMemory and Neural MechanismsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchReceptor Mechanisms and Signaling
To update or to create? The influence of novelty and prior knowledge on memory networks | Litcius