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Our lives unfold as sequences of events. We experience these events as seamless, although they are composed of individual images captured in between the interruptions imposed by eye blinks and saccades. Events typically involve visual imagery from the real world (scenes), and the hippocampus is frequently engaged in this context. It is unclear, however, whether the hippocampus would be similarly responsive to unfolding events that involve abstract imagery. Addressing this issue could provide insights into the nature of its contribution to event processing, with relevance for theories of hippocampal function. Consequently, during magnetoencephalography (MEG), we had female and male humans watch highly matched unfolding movie events composed of either scene image frames that reflected the real world, or frames depicting abstract patterns. We examined the evoked neuronal responses to each image frame along the time course of the movie events. Only one difference between the two conditions was evident, and that was during the viewing of the first image frame of events, detectable across frontotemporal sensors. Further probing of this difference using source reconstruction revealed greater engagement of a set of brain regions across parietal, frontal, premotor, and cerebellar cortices, with the largest change in broadband (1-30 Hz) power in the hippocampus during scene-based movie events. Hippocampal engagement during the first image frame of scene-based events could reflect its role in registering a recognizable context perhaps based on templates or schemas. The hippocampus, therefore, may help to set the scene for events very early on.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0099-21.2021 | DOI Listing |
Front Psychol
August 2025
Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
Misophonia is a condition typically described as heightened intolerance to specific everyday sounds, although intense emotional and physiological responses can also be triggered by non-auditory representations of the sources of these sounds, e.g., words, videos, or imagination (Swedo et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNPJ Syst Biol Appl
August 2025
Div. of Biology, IISER Pune, Dr. Homi Bhabha Road, Pashan, Pune, India.
The first embryonic division of Caenorhabditis elegans is a model for asymmetric cell division, and identifying the stages of cell division across related species could improve our understanding of the divergence of cellular events and mechanisms. Comparative microscopy of evolutionarily divergent species continues to rely on label-free differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy due to technical challenges in molecular tagging, with the identification of cell division stages still relying on label-free microscopy. Here, we compare multiple deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) trained to automate cell stage classification in DIC microscopy movies and interpret the results, with code and classification weights released as OpenSource.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
When recalling past events, patterns of gaze position and neural activity resemble those observed during the original experience. We hypothesized that these two phenomena, known as gaze reinstatement and neural reactivation, are linked through a common process that underlies the reinstatement of past experiences during memory retrieval. Here, we tested this proposal based on the viewing and recall of a narrative movie, which we assessed through functional magnetic resonance imaging, deep learning-based gaze prediction, and language modeling of spoken recall.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Autism
August 2025
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Department of Psychiatry, and Iowa Neuroscience Institute, The University of Iowa, 340 Iowa Avenue, Iowa City, IA, 52242, USA.
Background: Difficulty in social inferences is a core feature in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). On the behavioral level, it remains unclear whether reasoning about others' mental states (Theory of Mind, ToM) and empathic responses to others' physical states may be similarly or differentially affected in autism. On the neural level, these inferences typically engage distinct brain networks (ToM versus Pain networks), but their functional specialization remains not well understood in autism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvol Hum Sci
July 2025
École normale supérieure-PSL, Institut Jean Nicod, Paris, France.
We present a comprehensive analysis of the rise of fictions across human narratives, using large-scale datasets that collectively span over 65,000 works across various media (movies, literary works), cultures (over 30 countries, Western and non-Western), and time periods (2000 BCE to 2020 CE). We measured fictiveness - defined as the degree of departure from reality - across three narrative dimensions: protagonists, events, and settings. We used automatic annotations from large language models (LLMs) to systematically score fictiveness and ensured the robustness and validity of our measure, specifically by demonstrating predictable variations in fictiveness across different genres, in all media.
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