Context in memory is reconstructed, not encoded

Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 167 (105934) (2024)
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Abstract

Context has long been regarded as an important element of long-term memory, and episodic memory in particular. The ability to remember not only the object or focus of a memory but also contextual details allow us to reconstruct integrated representations of events. However, despite its prevalence in the memory literature, context remains difficult to define and identify, with different studies using context to refer to different sets of stimuli or concepts. These varying definitions of context have not prevented it from being a key element of many models of memory. Within these models, context is usually explicitly encoded as an element of an event and processed through different neural pathways to other elements of the event, such as objects. Here we challenge the notion that context in memory is encoded. We offer an alternative where context in memory takes a variety of forms depending on the question being asked

Author Profiles

Alex Easton
University of Western Ontario
Simon Paul James
Durham University
John Sutton
Macquarie University

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