Motifs of human high-frequency oscillations structure processing and memory of continuous audiovisual narratives.

The discrete events of our narrative experience are organized by the neural substrate that underlies episodic memory. This narrative process is segmented into distinct units by event boundaries, which facilitate a replay process that acts to consolidate each event into a narrative memory. High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) may synchronize neural activity during these processes. We use intracranial recordings from participants viewing and freely recalling a continuous, audiovisual stimulus. We find that hippocampal HFOs increase following event boundaries and hippocampal-cortical coincident HFOs (co-HFOs) occur in cortical regions that underlie event segmentation (inferior parietal, precuneus, lateral occipital, and inferior frontal cortices). Event-specific co-HFO patterns that occur during event viewing reoccur following event boundaries for the subsequent three events and during recall. This is consistent with models that support replay as a mechanism for memory consolidation. Therefore, HFOs may coordinate activity across brain regions that facilitate event segmentation, encode memory of discrete events, and bind representations to assemble memory of a coherent, continuous experience.
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Mishra Mishra, Tostaeva Tostaeva, Nentwich Nentwich, Espinal Espinal, Markowitz Markowitz, Winfield Winfield, Freund Freund, Gherman Gherman, Leszczynski Leszczynski, Schroeder Schroeder, Mehta Mehta, Bickel Bickel
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