Ben and Troy at LEARNMEM 2023

Ben and Troy presented posters at this year’s 2023 International Conference on Learning and Memory annual meeting.
See their posters below:

Chaloupka, B. & Zeithamova, D. (2023). Overlap between events has different consequences for learning and memory when events overlap in location versus content information. Poster presented at the 2023 International Conference on Learning and Memory, Huntington Beach, CA. PDF
Houser, M., T., & Zeithamova, D. (2023). Successful generalization of conceptual knowledge after training to remember specific events. Poster presented at the 2023 International Conference on Learning and Memory, Huntington Beach, CA. PDF

Troy at CNS!

Troy presented posters at this year’s CNS annual meeting.
See their posters below:

Houser, M., T., & Zeithamova, D. (2023). Successful generalization of conceptual knowledge after training to remember specific events. Poster presented at the 2023 Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA. PDF.

Ben, Min and Troy at SFN!

Neuroscience-2022-Logo

Ben, Min and Troy presented posters at this year’s SFN annual meeting.
See their posters below:

Chaloupka, B., & Zeithamova, D. (2022). Overlap between events has different consequences for learning and memory when events overlap in location versus content information. Poster presented at the 2022 Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego. PDF.

Zhang, M. & Zeithamova, D. (2022). Amygdala volume and emotion regulation in aging. Poster presented at the 2022 Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego. PDF.

Houser, T., DuBrow S. & Zeithamova, D. (2022). Exploration-exploitation tradeoff during navigation of abstract task space. Poster presented at the 2022 Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego. PDF.

Return to in-person conferences! Lea and Ben head to San Francisco for the CNS 2022 annual meeting

2022 banner CNS

Lea and Ben presented posters at this year’s CNS annual meeting.
See their posters below:

Frank, L., & Zeithamova, D. (2022). The contribution of anterior and posterior hippocampal connections to individual differences in memory specificity and generalization. Poster presented at the 2022 Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco. PDF.

Chaloupka, B. & Zeithamova, D. (2022). Differential effects of content and location overlap on learning and memory. Poster presented at the 2022 Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco. PDF.

Our new fMRI study featured in Around the O

Check out our new paper on how category labels can bias our perception, published in the Journal of Neuroscience and featured in Around the O.

Ashby, S. R., & Zeithamova, D. (2022). Category-biased neural representations form spontaneously during learning that emphasizes memory for specific instances. Journal of Neuroscience42(5), 865-876. LINK

Read the article from Around the O

New Paper Published on Journal of Neuroscience

Stefania and Dasa have a new paper published in the Journal of neuroscience. 

Ashby, S. R., & Zeithamova, D. (2022). Category-biased neural representations form spontaneously during learning that emphasizes memory for specific instances. Journal of Neuroscience, 42(5), 865-876.LINK

Abstract:

Category learning, learning to sort a set of stimuli into categories or groups, can induce category biases in perception such that items in the same category are perceived as more similar than items from different categories. To what degree category bias develops when learning goals emphasize individuation of each stimulus and whether the bias emerges spontaneously during learning itself rather than in response to task demands is unclear. Here, we used functional MRI (fMRI) during encoding to test for category biases in neural representations of individual stimuli during learning. Human participants (males and females) encountered face-blend stimuli with unique first names and shared family names that indicated category membership. Participants were instructed to learn the full name for each face. Neural pattern classification and pattern similarity analyses were used to track category information in the brain. Results showed that stimulus category could be decoded during encoding across many frontal, parietal, and occipital regions. Furthermore, two stimuli from the same category were represented more similarly in the prefrontal cortex than two stimuli from different categories equated for physical similarity. These findings illustrate that a mere presence of category label can bias neural representations spontaneously during encoding to emphasize category-relevant information, even in the absence of explicit categorization demands and when category-irrelevant information remains relevant for task goals.