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Multiple-object tracking as a tool for parametrically modulating memory reactivation

View ORCID ProfileJ. Poppenk, View ORCID ProfileK.A. Norman
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/109256
J. Poppenk
aDepartment of Psychology, Queen’s University, Humphrey Hall, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6
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  • For correspondence: jpoppenk@queensu.ca
K.A. Norman
bPrinceton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, 08540
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Abstract

Converging evidence supports the “non-monotonic plasticity” hypothesis that although complete retrieval may strengthen memories, partial retrieval weakens them. Yet, the classic experimental paradigms used to study effects of partial retrieval are not ideally suited to doing so, because they lack the parametric control needed to ensure that the memory is activated to the appropriate degree (i.e., that there is some retrieval, but not enough to cause memory strengthening). Here we present a novel procedure designed to accommodate this need. After participants learned a list of word-scene associates, they completed a cued mental visualization task that was combined with a multiple-object tracking (MOT) procedure, which we selected for its ability to interfere with mental visualization in a parametrically adjustable way (by varying the number of MOT targets). We also used fMRI data to successfully train an “associative recall” classifier for use in this task: this classifier revealed greater memory reactivation during trials in which associative memories were cued while participants tracked one, rather than five MOT targets. However, the classifier was insensitive to task difficulty when recall was not taking place, suggesting it had indeed tracked memory reactivation rather than task difficulty per se. Consistent with the classifier findings, participants’ introspective ratings of visualization vividness were modulated by MOT task difficulty. In addition, we observed reduced classifier output and slowing of responses in a post-reactivation memory test, consistent with the hypothesis that partial reactivation, induced by MOT, weakened memory. These results serve as a "proof of concept” that MOT can be used to parametrically modulate memory retrieval – a property that may prove useful in future investigation of partial retrieval effects, e.g., in closed-loop experiments.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted March 15, 2017.
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Multiple-object tracking as a tool for parametrically modulating memory reactivation
J. Poppenk, K.A. Norman
bioRxiv 109256; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/109256
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Multiple-object tracking as a tool for parametrically modulating memory reactivation
J. Poppenk, K.A. Norman
bioRxiv 109256; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/109256

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