학술논문

Parallel hippocampal-parietal circuits for self- and goal-oriented processing
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 118(34)
Subject
Neurosciences
Mental Health
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Mental health
Adult
Brain Mapping
Databases
Factual
Female
Hippocampus
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Memory
Episodic
Nerve Net
Neural Pathways
Parietal Lobe
Task Performance and Analysis
Young Adult
hippocampus
functional connectivity
brain networks
individual variability
resting state
Language
Abstract
The hippocampus is critically important for a diverse range of cognitive processes, such as episodic memory, prospective memory, affective processing, and spatial navigation. Using individual-specific precision functional mapping of resting-state functional MRI data, we found the anterior hippocampus (head and body) to be preferentially functionally connected to the default mode network (DMN), as expected. The hippocampal tail, however, was strongly preferentially functionally connected to the parietal memory network (PMN), which supports goal-oriented cognition and stimulus recognition. This anterior-posterior dichotomy of resting-state functional connectivity was well-matched by differences in task deactivations and anatomical segmentations of the hippocampus. Task deactivations were localized to the hippocampal head and body (DMN), relatively sparing the tail (PMN). The functional dichotomization of the hippocampus into anterior DMN-connected and posterior PMN-connected parcels suggests parallel but distinct circuits between the hippocampus and medial parietal cortex for self- versus goal-oriented processing.