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The cognitive neuroscience of memory representations

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Abstract

The present paper considers the cognitive neuroscience of memory from a representational perspective with the aim of shedding light on current empirical and theoretical issues. We focus on episodic memory, differentiating active versus latent, and cognitive versus neural memory representations. We adopt a causal perspective, according to which a memory representation must have a causal connection to a past event to count as a memory. We note that retrieved episodic information may nonetheless only partially determine the content of an active memory representation, which can comprise a combination of the retrieved information with semantic, schematic and situational information. We further note that, especially in the case of memories for temporally remote events, re-encoding operations likely lead to a causal chain that extends from the original experience of the event to its currently accessible memory trace. We discuss how the reinstatement framework provides a mechanistic basis for the causal linkage between an experience, the memory trace encoding it, and the episodic memory of the experience, highlighting the crucial role of hippocampal engrams in encoding patterns of neocortical activity that, when active, constitute the neural representation of an episodic memory. Finally, we discuss some of the ways in which a memory can become modified and hence distanced from the episode that precipitated it.
Original languageEnglish
Article number106417
JournalNeuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
Volume179
Early online date15 Oct 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Representation
  • Engram
  • Causality
  • Reinstatement
  • Episodic Memory
  • Semantic Memory
  • Semantic memory
  • Episodic memory

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