Reduced hippocampal-cortical connectivity during memory suppression predicts the ability to forget unwanted memories

Author:

Yan Yuchi12,Hulbert Justin C3,Zhuang Kaixiang12,Liu Wei4,Wei Dongtao12,Qiu Jiang12,Anderson Michael C5,Yang Wenjing12

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (SWU), Ministry of Education , No. 2 TianSheng Road, Beibei District, Chongqing 400715, China

2. Faculty of Psychology, Southwest University (SWU) , No. 2 TianShen Road, Beibei District, Chongqing 400715, China

3. Bard College, PO Box 5000, Annandale-on-Hudson Psychology Program, , New York 12504, United States

4. School of Psychology, Central China Normal University (CCNU) , No. 152 Luoyu Road, Hongshan, Wuhan 430079, China

5. University of Cambridge MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, , 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 7EF, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract The ability to suppress unwelcome memories is important for productivity and well-being. Successful memory suppression is associated with hippocampal deactivations and a concomitant disruption of this region’s functionality. Much of the previous neuroimaging literature exploring such suppression-related hippocampal modulations has focused on the region’s negative coupling with the prefrontal cortex. Task-based changes in functional connectivity between the hippocampus and other brain regions still need further exploration. In the present study, we utilize psychophysiological interactions and seed connectome-based predictive modeling to investigate the relationship between the hippocampus and the rest of the brain as 134 participants attempted to suppress unwanted memories during the Think/No-Think task. The results show that during retrieval suppression, the right hippocampus exhibited decreased functional connectivity with visual cortical areas (lingual and cuneus gyrus), left nucleus accumbens and the brain-stem that predicted superior forgetting of unwanted memories on later memory tests. Validation tests verified that prediction performance was not an artifact of head motion or prediction method and that the negative features remained consistent across different brain parcellations. These findings suggest that systemic memory suppression involves more than the modulation of hippocampal activity—it alters functional connectivity patterns between the hippocampus and visual cortex, leading to successful forgetting.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing

Ministry of Education

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

Reference87 articles.

1. Shared representations for working memory and mental imagery in early visual cortex;Albers;Curr Biol,2013

2. Suppressing unwanted memories by executive control;Anderson;Nature,2001

3. Neural mechanisms of motivated forgetting;Anderson;Trends Cogn Sci,2014

4. Active forgetting: adaptation of memory by prefrontal control;Anderson;Annu Rev Psychol,2021

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Adaptive Memory of a Neuromorphic Transistor with Multi-Sensory Signal Fusion;ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces;2023-07-17

2. Suppression‐Induced Forgetting as a Model for Repression;Topics in Cognitive Science;2023-07-10

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