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The role of the hippocampus in weighting expectations during inference under uncertainty.


ABSTRACT: Making inference under uncertainty requires an optimal weighting of prior expectations and observations. How this weighting is realized in the brain remains elusive. To investigate this, we recorded functional neuroimaging data while participants estimated a number based on noisy observations. Crucially, the prior expectation about the variability of observations (an expected variability) was manipulated. Consistent with normative models, when novel observations were characterized by higher expected or observed variability, participants' estimates relied more on expectations than novel observations and were characterized by higher stochasticity. Activity in hippocampus increased when novel evidence was characterized by higher expected or observed variability. Response in superior parietal cortex reflected a precision-weighted prediction error signal (i.e., the distance between observations and expectations) that was modulated by hippocampal activity. Our findings implicate the hippocampus during inference under uncertainty, suggesting a role in weighting prior representations over observations and in modulating responsivity of superior parietal cortex to prediction error.

SUBMITTER: Rigoli F 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6533111 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The role of the hippocampus in weighting expectations during inference under uncertainty.

Rigoli Francesco F   Michely Jochen J   Friston Karl J KJ   Dolan Raymond J RJ  

Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior 20190123


Making inference under uncertainty requires an optimal weighting of prior expectations and observations. How this weighting is realized in the brain remains elusive. To investigate this, we recorded functional neuroimaging data while participants estimated a number based on noisy observations. Crucially, the prior expectation about the variability of observations (an expected variability) was manipulated. Consistent with normative models, when novel observations were characterized by higher expe  ...[more]

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