Simulating the situated-self drives hippocampo-cortical engagement during inner narration of events

Cereb Cortex. 2022 Dec 8;32(24):5716-5731. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhac047.

Abstract

We often use inner narration when thinking about past and future events. The present paradigm explicitly addresses the influence of the language used in inner narration on the hippocampus-dependent event construction process. We assessed the language context effect during the inner narration of different event types: past, future, daydream, and self-unrelated fictitious events. The language context was assessed via a fluent bilingual population who used inner narration, either in their first language (L1) or second language (L2). Not all inner narration of events elicited hippocampo-cortical activity. In fact, only the angular gyrus and precuneus-retrosplenial cortex were activated by inner narration across all event types. More precisely, only inner narration of events which entailed the simulation of bodily self-location in space (whether or not they were time-marked: past, future, daydream) depended on the hippocampo-cortical system, while inner narration of events that did not entail bodily self-location (self-unrelated fictitious) did not. The language context of the narration influenced the bilinguals' hippocampo-cortical system by enhancing the co-activation of semantic areas with the hippocampus for inner narration of events in the L2. Overall, this study highlights 2 important characteristics of hippocampo-cortical-dependent inner narration of events: The core episodic hippocampal system is activated for inner narration of events simulating self-location in space (regardless of time-marking), and the inner language used for narration (L1 or L2) mediates hippocampal functional connectivity.

Keywords: angular gyrus; anterior temporal cortex; body experience; hippocampus; language.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cerebral Cortex* / physiology
  • Hippocampus* / physiology
  • Language*
  • Multilingualism
  • Narration*
  • Semantics