Communications Biology (Sep 2024)

Embodiment in episodic memory through premotor-hippocampal coupling

  • Nathalie Heidi Meyer,
  • Baptiste Gauthier,
  • Sara Stampacchia,
  • Juliette Boscheron,
  • Mariana Babo-Rebelo,
  • Jevita Potheegadoo,
  • Bruno Herbelin,
  • Florian Lance,
  • Vincent Alvarez,
  • Elizabeth Franc,
  • Fabienne Esposito,
  • Marilia Morais Lacerda,
  • Olaf Blanke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06757-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Episodic memory (EM) allows us to remember and relive past events and experiences and has been linked to cortical-hippocampal reinstatement of encoding activity. While EM is fundamental to establish a sense of self across time, this claim and its link to the sense of agency (SoA), based on bodily signals, has not been tested experimentally. Using real-time sensorimotor stimulation, immersive virtual reality, and fMRI we manipulated the SoA and report stronger hippocampal reinstatement for scenes encoded under preserved SoA, reflecting recall performance in a recognition task. We link SoA to EM showing that hippocampal reinstatement is coupled with reinstatement in premotor cortex, a key SoA region. We extend these findings in a severe amnesic patient whose memory lacked the normal dependency on the SoA. Premotor-hippocampal coupling in EM describes how a key aspect of the bodily self at encoding is neurally reinstated during the retrieval of past episodes, enabling a sense of self across time.