Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory

Converging cognitive and neuroimaging evidence reveals that episodic memory and episodic future thinking (EFT) share component processes. Much less is known about the relationship between EFT and working memory (WM) processes. We hypothesized that WM capacity might provide a crucial componential cog...

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Main Author: Hill, Paul Faxon
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2019
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/89221
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-892212020-09-29T05:32:37Z Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory Hill, Paul Faxon Psychology Diana, Rachel A. Cate, Anthony LaConte, Stephen Michael Bell, Martha Ann Episodic Future Thinking Episodic Memory Working Memory fMRI EEG Converging cognitive and neuroimaging evidence reveals that episodic memory and episodic future thinking (EFT) share component processes. Much less is known about the relationship between EFT and working memory (WM) processes. We hypothesized that WM capacity might provide a crucial componential cognitive role during EFT by supporting the translation of information from discrete episodic memories into a novel future event. We tested this hypothesis in two studies. In Study 1, we collected functional magnetic resonance imaging data during a dual-task interference paradigm that varied WM load and processing demands during EFT. Events imagined while actively maintaining bound item-location representations were less vivid than those imagined during low WM load control trials. Measures of functional and effective connectivity indicated that this behavioral effect corresponded with reduced coupling between the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex and right temporoparietal junction. Events imagined while simultaneously manipulating items in WM took longer to construct than events imagined during control trials and were associated with less functional coupling between the right hippocampus and posterior visuospatial regions. In Study 2, participants completed a similar WM dual-task while simultaneously recalling past events or imagining future events during scalp-recorded encephalography (EEG). As in Study 1, future events imagined while maintaining item-location representations were less vivid than control trials. This effect was specific to future events and corresponded to reduced theta reactivity over bilateral temporoparietal sites. Relative to episodic memory, EFT was associated with alpha synchronization over frontal and parietal sites as well as greater theta-gamma phase amplitude coupling in the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. In contrast, episodic memory was associated with greater cross-frequency coupling between frontal theta and occipital gamma oscillations. These results provide novel empirical support for previous theoretical accounts suggesting that WM capacity provides the cognitive workspace necessary to temporarily store and recombine details from discrete episodes into a future event representation. PHD 2019-04-27T06:00:44Z 2019-04-27T06:00:44Z 2017-11-02 Dissertation vt_gsexam:12777 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/89221 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Episodic Future Thinking
Episodic Memory
Working Memory
fMRI
EEG
spellingShingle Episodic Future Thinking
Episodic Memory
Working Memory
fMRI
EEG
Hill, Paul Faxon
Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory
description Converging cognitive and neuroimaging evidence reveals that episodic memory and episodic future thinking (EFT) share component processes. Much less is known about the relationship between EFT and working memory (WM) processes. We hypothesized that WM capacity might provide a crucial componential cognitive role during EFT by supporting the translation of information from discrete episodic memories into a novel future event. We tested this hypothesis in two studies. In Study 1, we collected functional magnetic resonance imaging data during a dual-task interference paradigm that varied WM load and processing demands during EFT. Events imagined while actively maintaining bound item-location representations were less vivid than those imagined during low WM load control trials. Measures of functional and effective connectivity indicated that this behavioral effect corresponded with reduced coupling between the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex and right temporoparietal junction. Events imagined while simultaneously manipulating items in WM took longer to construct than events imagined during control trials and were associated with less functional coupling between the right hippocampus and posterior visuospatial regions. In Study 2, participants completed a similar WM dual-task while simultaneously recalling past events or imagining future events during scalp-recorded encephalography (EEG). As in Study 1, future events imagined while maintaining item-location representations were less vivid than control trials. This effect was specific to future events and corresponded to reduced theta reactivity over bilateral temporoparietal sites. Relative to episodic memory, EFT was associated with alpha synchronization over frontal and parietal sites as well as greater theta-gamma phase amplitude coupling in the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. In contrast, episodic memory was associated with greater cross-frequency coupling between frontal theta and occipital gamma oscillations. These results provide novel empirical support for previous theoretical accounts suggesting that WM capacity provides the cognitive workspace necessary to temporarily store and recombine details from discrete episodes into a future event representation. === PHD
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Hill, Paul Faxon
author Hill, Paul Faxon
author_sort Hill, Paul Faxon
title Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory
title_short Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory
title_full Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory
title_fullStr Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory
title_full_unstemmed Weaving the Past into an Imagined Future:  Episodic Future Thinking Relies on Working Memory as a Cognitive Interface with Episodic Memory
title_sort weaving the past into an imagined future:  episodic future thinking relies on working memory as a cognitive interface with episodic memory
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/89221
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