Title of article
Mental time travel into the past and the future in healthy aged adults: An fMRI study
Author/Authors
Viard، نويسنده , , Armelle and Chételat، نويسنده , , Gaël and Lebreton، نويسنده , , Karine and Desgranges، نويسنده , , Béatrice and Landeau، نويسنده , , Brigitte and de La Sayette، نويسنده , , Vincent and Eustache، نويسنده , , Francis and Piolino، نويسنده , , Pascale، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
1
To page
9
Abstract
Remembering the past and envisioning the future rely on episodic memory which enables mental time travel. Studies in young adults indicate that past and future thinking share common cognitive and neural underpinnings. No imaging data is yet available in healthy aged subjects. Using fMRI, we scanned older subjects while they remembered personal events (PP: last 12 months) or envisioned future plans (FP: next 12 months). Behaviorally, both time-periods were comparable in terms of visual search strategy, emotion, frequency of rehearsal and recency of the last evocation. However, PP were more episodic, engaged a higher state of autonoetic consciousness and mental visual images were clearer and more numerous than FP. Neuroimaging results revealed a common network of activation (posterior cingulate cortex, precuneus, prefrontal cortex, hippocampus) reflecting the use of similar cognitive processes. Furthermore, the episodic nature of PP depended on hippocampal and visuo-spatial activations (occipital and angular gyri), while, for FP, it depended on the inferior frontal and lateral temporal gyri, involved in semantic memory retrieval. The common neural network and behavior suggests that healthy aged subjects thought about their future prospects in the past. The contribution of retrospective thinking into the future that engages the same network as the one recruited when remembering the past is discussed. Within this network, differential recruitment of specific areas highlights the episodic distinction between past and future mental time travel.
Keywords
autobiographical memory , future thinking , FMRI , Hippocampus , Episodic memory
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2250314
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