Prediction error determines how memories are organized in the brain

Author:

Kennedy Nicholas GW1ORCID,Lee Jessica C12,Killcross Simon1,Westbrook R Fred1,Holmes Nathan M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of New South Wales

2. School of Psychology, University of Sydney

Abstract

How is new information organized in memory? According to latent state theories, this is determined by the level of surprise, or prediction error, generated by the new information: a small prediction error leads to the updating of existing memory, large prediction error leads to encoding of a new memory. We tested this idea using a protocol in which rats were first conditioned to fear a stimulus paired with shock. The stimulus was then gradually extinguished by progressively reducing the shock intensity until the stimulus was presented alone. Consistent with latent state theories, this gradual extinction protocol (small prediction errors) was better than standard extinction (large prediction errors) in producing long-term suppression of fear responses, and the benefit of gradual extinction was due to updating of the conditioning memory with information about extinction. Thus, prediction error determines how new information is organized in memory, and latent state theories adequately describe the ways in which this occurs.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Australian Government

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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