ePoster

LONG-TERM MEMORY FOR MOTION DIRECTIONS INDUCES EXPERIENCE-DEPENDENT RESPONSES IN THE VISUAL AREA MST

Marius Kreisand 4 co-authors

Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS06-09PM-486

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS06-09PM-486

Poster preview

LONG-TERM MEMORY FOR MOTION DIRECTIONS INDUCES EXPERIENCE-DEPENDENT RESPONSES IN THE VISUAL AREA MST poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS06-09PM-486

Abstract

Traditionally, neocortical declarative memory formation has been viewed as a slow and hippocampus-dependent process. While it has been demonstrated that engrams can form rapidly in higher-order association-cortex, the potential for rapid plasticity of the early visual cortex remains debated. Here, we examine whether memory engrams for basic visual features can develop rapidly in feature-selective visual cortex, with a focus on color and motion direction.
Participants (preliminary n=39, planned 80) learned object-feature associations in five encoding-recall repetitions with concurrent 3T fMRI. During encoding, object-color-motion triplets were presented, and participants encoded either object-color (color group) or object-motion associations (motion group). During recall, objects were presented without feature information to isolate memory-related activity in feature-selective cortex. Memory retention was assessed after 24h.
Behaviorally, participants demonstrated clear evidence of learning and retention over 24h (Fig1A). During memory recall, bilateral activity in motion-sensitive visual area MST increased specifically in the motion group across the recall repetitions (Fig1BC), and these changes remained stable even after 24h. Additionally, repetition-related increases in functional activity within MST were associated with recall performance, highlighting the behavioral relevance of these neural changes (Fig1D).
These findings show rapid, long-lasting and behaviorally relevant plasticity of feature-selective visual cortex in response to learning, which aligns well with emerging evidence for a role of early visual cortex in long-term memory. Furthermore, they indicate that the potential for rapid memory formation might be a fundamental property across the cortical hierarchy. Future diffusion MRI analyses will determine whether functional changes are accompanied by changes in microstructural plasticity.

Fig 1: A. Behavioral recall performance across five repetitions of the object–feature association task and 24-hour delayed recall (Repetition 6); B. Whole-brain group-level analysis in MNI space showing elevated MST activity for Recall > Baseline and Recall 5 > Recall 1 contrasts (motion > color group, p_uncorr < 0.001). The left MST anatomical ROI is indicated; C. Mean beta values across the five recall repetitions within the MST cluster defined in B (Recall 5 > Recall 1) for color and motion group; D. Correlation between mean beta values of five recall repetitions and recall performance of five repetitions within subject, computed within the same MST cluster for color and motion group; ns p > 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001;

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