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by Amy Blumenthal
July 25, 2025
from
NeuroscienceNews Website

The study also
provides evidence
that the hippocampus
uses a temporal code
to represent visual
memory categories.
Credit: Neuroscience
News
Researchers at
USC have made a significant
breakthrough in understanding how
the human brain forms, stores and
recalls visual memories.
A new study (Distributed
Temporal Coding of Visual Memory Categories in Human Hippocampal
Neurons Revealed by an Interpretable Decoding Model),
published in Advanced Science, harnesses human patient brain
recordings and a powerful machine learning model to shed new light
on the brain's internal code that sorts memories of objects into
categories - think of it like the brain's filing cabinet of imagery.
The results demonstrated that the research team could essentially
read subjects' minds, by pinpointing the category of visual image
being recalled, purely from the precise timing of the subject's
neural activity.
The work solves a fundamental neuroscience debate and offers
exciting potential for future brain-computer interfaces, including
memory prostheses to restore lost memory in patients with
neurological disorders like dementia.
The research was led by Dong Song, associate professor in the
Department of Neurological Surgery and the Alfred E. Mann Department
of Biomedical Engineering and Charles Liu, the USC
Neurorestoration Center director at Keck School of Medicine of USC
and professor of biomedical engineering at USC Viterbi School of
Engineering.
The first author, Xiwei She, is a former Ph.D. student from
the Song Lab and is currently a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford
University.
How does the Brain Store Visual
Information?
The
hippocampus is a critical brain
region, well-known for its role in creating new episodic memories -
the what, where, and when of past events.
While its function in encoding spatial ("where")
and temporal ("when") information is relatively understood, how it
manages to encode the vast and high-dimensional world of objects
("what") has remained a mystery.
It's simply not feasible for the hippocampus to store every single
object separately; instead, scientists hypothesized that the brain
might simplify this complexity by encoding objects into categories.
Song, who is Director of the USC Neural Modeling and
Interface Laboratory, has been conducting pioneering work in the
area of memory prostheses, creating devices that mimic and restore
cognitive function, with potential clinical applications for
patients with dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
"We have tested our memory prostheses in a
lot of human patients. We created the prostheses and have
published several papers showing that it can enhance memory
function," Song said.
"But I also wanted to take the opportunity to answer some
fundamental neuroscience questions. And this is one of them."
Brain recordings from Epilepsy
Patients yield insights
Song, Liu and their team's latest work harnesses brain recording
from 24 epilepsy patients with intracranial depth electrodes
implanted in their brains for seizure localization.
Recordings from these patients allowed the team to pinpoint how
hippocampal neurons encode complex visual information, not by firing
rate alone, but by the precise timing of their activity.
"Working with human patients suffering from
memory dysfunction, it was exceptionally exciting to see the
current studies reveal a model for the neural basis of memory
formation," Liu said.
The research team developed an innovative
experimental-modeling approach to unravel this intricate process.
The team recorded the electrical activity,
specifically "spikes," from hippocampal CA3 and CA1 neurons in the
epilepsy patients.
The recordings were gathered while patients performed a "delayed
match-to-sample" (DMS) task - a popular neuroscience technique to
test visual short-term memory.
"We let the patients see five categories of
images: 'animal,' 'plant,' 'building,' 'vehicle,' and 'small
tools.' Then we recorded the hippocampal signal," Song
said.
"Then, based on the signal, we asked
ourselves a question, using our machine learning technique. Can
we decode what category image they are recalling purely based on
their brain signal?"
The results confirmed the hypothesis that the
human brain does indeed recall visual objects by sorting them into
categories, and that these visual memory categories that the
patients were thinking of were decodable based on their brain
signals.
"It's like reading your hippocampus to see
what kind of memory you are trying to form," Song said.
"We found that we can actually do that. We
can pretty accurately decode what kind of category of image the
patient was trying to remember."
An efficient Strategy for Storing
diverse Memories
The core of the discovery lies in the research team's interpretable
memory decoding model.
Unlike previous methods that often rely on
averaging neuronal activity over many trials or using pre-selected
temporal resolutions, this advanced model analyzes the "spatio-temporal
patterns" of spikes from an entire ensemble of neurons.
The study also provides evidence that the hippocampus uses a
temporal code to represent visual memory categories. This means that
the precise timing of individual neuron spikes, often at the
millisecond scale, carries meaningful information.
While previous studies often focused on individual neurons, this
research revealed that hippocampal neuron ensembles
encode memory categories in a distributed manner.
This means that while a large proportion of neurons (70-80%) were
involved in assigning a visual memory to a category, within each
individual neuron, only brief, specific moments contributed to this
encoding.
This efficient strategy allows the brain to store
diverse memories while minimizing energy consumption.
"With this knowledge, we can begin to develop
clinical tools to restore memory loss and improve lives,
including memory prostheses and other neurorestorative
strategies," Liu said.
"While this result may be important to all patients who suffer
memory disorders, it has profound relevance specifically to the
epilepsy patients who participated in the studies, many of whom
suffer from hippocampal dysfunction that manifests in both
seizures as well as cognitive/memory disorders."
About this Visual Memory research
News
"Distributed
Temporal Coding of Visual Memory Categories in Human Hippocampal
Neurons revealed by an Interpretable Decoding Model" by
Dong Song et al.
Abstract:
The hippocampus is crucial for forming new
episodic memories.
While its role in encoding spatial and
temporal information (where and when) is well
understood, how it encodes objects (what) remains unclear
due to the high dimensionality of object space.
Rather than encoding each object separately, the hippocampus may
encode object categories to reduce complexity.
Here, an experimental-modeling approach to investigate how the
hippocampus encodes visual memory categories in humans is
developed.
Spikes are recorded from hippocampal CA3 and CA1 neurons in 24
epilepsy patients performing a delayed match-to-sample task
involving five image categories.
An interpretable memory decoding model is employed to decode
memory categories from hippocampal spiking activity and identify
the spatio-temporal characteristics of hippocampal encoding.
Using this model, the optimal temporal resolutions for decoding
each visual memory category per neuron are estimated.
Results indicate that visual memory categories can be decoded
from hippocampal spike patterns, supporting the presence of
category-specific coding.
Hippocampal neuron ensembles encode memory categories in a
distributed manner, akin to a population code, while individual
neurons use a temporal code.
Additionally, CA3 and CA1 neurons exhibit similar and redundant
memory category information, likely due to strong and diffuse
feedforward synaptic connections from CA3 to CA1 regions.
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