Perceived plausibility modulates hippocampal activity in episodic counterfactual thinking

Author:

Miceli Kaylee12ORCID,Morales‐Torres Ricardo23,Khoudary Ari4,Faul Leonard2,Parikh Natasha5,De Brigard Felipe123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Philosophy Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

2. Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Levine Science Research Center Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

3. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

4. Department of Cognitive Sciences University of California, Irvine Irvine California USA

5. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractEpisodic counterfactual thinking (ECT) consists of imagining alternative outcomes to past personal events. Previous research has shown that ECT shares common neural substrates with episodic future thinking (EFT): our ability to imagine possible future events. Both ECT and EFT have been shown to critically depend on the hippocampus, and past research has explored hippocampal engagement as a function of the perceived plausibility of an imagined future event. However, the extent to which the hippocampus is modulated by perceived plausibility during ECT is unknown. In this study, we combine two functional magnetic resonance imaging datasets to investigate whether perceived plausibility modulates hippocampal activity during ECT. Our results indicate that plausibility parametrically modulates hippocampal activity during ECT, and that such modulation is confined to the left anterior portion of the hippocampus. Moreover, our results indicate that this modulation is positive, such that increased activity in the left anterior hippocampus is associated with higher ratings of ECT plausibility. We suggest that neither effort nor difficulty alone can account for these results, and instead suggest possible alternatives to explain the role of the hippocampus during the construction of plausible and implausible ECT.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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