New Research on Prospective Memory at U.T. Austin, funded by the NSF. 
ABSTRACT
We often reflect on our past to understand current experience or predict
 future events.  For example, in choosing a birthday gift for a friend, 
we can look to past birthdays for help in deciding what gift would 
elicit the greatest joy for the friend this year.  In this way, memory 
is not merely retrospective, but also intrinsically prospective. With 
funding from the National Science Foundation, Alison Preston, Ph.D., and
 colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin are using functional 
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to understand how the brain supports 
predictions about the present and future based on memories of the past. 
 Despite decades of neuroscience research focused on retrospective 
memory, very little is known about the neurobiological mechanisms that 
enable the prospective use of experience.  However, a rich history of 
research suggests that the brain's medial temporal lobe structures are 
important for learning and remembering individual experiences.  One goal
 of this project is to learn how these brain structures reactivate 
existing memories in the face of new experiences.  In one set of 
studies, participants learn sequences of events while undergoing fMRI. 
The researchers are seeking evidence in the fMRI data for reactivation 
of prior memories during prediction of upcoming events in the sequence. 
 A second goal of this project is to discover how remembering influences
 new learning. To be maximally adaptive for future use, memories do not 
simply consist of individual records of directly experienced events but 
also include memories built by integrating knowledge across different 
events.  The researchers are learning how remembering past events during
 new situations provides an opportunity for new memories to be formed 
that connect present experience with existing memories.  For example, if
 today one sees an unfamiliar man walking a familiar Great Dane, the 
sight of the dog may trigger a memory for a previous occasion on which 
one saw that same dog being walked by a woman.  By recalling the 
previous experience with the Great Dane, a new memory can be formed that
 not only represents the relationship between the man and the dog, and 
the woman and the dog, but also connects the man and the woman, despite 
ones never having seen them together. Such integrated memories are a 
means by which individual experiences are combined to anticipate future 
judgments and actions.  In related fMRI experiments, participants study 
events that share content and make judgments about the relationship 
between those experiences. These studies are allowing the researchers to
 understand how the brain builds a rich, cohesive record of experience 
by incorporating new events into existing memories.
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