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Imagining the future: Evidence for a hippocampal contribution to constructive processing
Authors:Brendan Gaesser  R Nathan Spreng  Victoria C McLelland  Donna Rose Addis  Daniel L Schacter
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, Harvard University, , Cambridge, Massachusetts;2. Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, Department of Human Development, Cornell University, , Ithaca, New York;3. School of Psychology and Centre for Brain Research, The University of Auckland, , Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract:Imagining future events and remembering past events rely on a common core network, but several regions within this network—including the hippocampus—show increased activity for imagining future events compared to remembering past events. It remains unclear whether this hippocampal activity reflects processes related to the demands of constructing details retrieved across disparate episodic memories into coherent imaginary events, encoding these events into memory, novelty detection, or some combination of these processes. We manipulated the degree of constructive processing by comparing activity associated with the initial construction of an imagined scenario with the re‐construction of an imagined scenario (imagine vs. re‐imagine). After accounting for effects of novelty and subsequent memory, we found that a region in the hippocampus was preferentially activated for newly constructed imagined events compared with re‐imagined events. Our results suggest that the hippocampus may support several distinct but related processes that are critical for imagining future events, and they also indicate that a particular region within posterior hippocampus may uniquely contribute to the construction of imagined future events. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:autobiographical  episodic memory  imagination  simulation  fMRI
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