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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01nz8062179
Title: Sherlock Movie Watching Dataset
Contributors: Chen, Janice
Issue Date: 26-Oct-2016
Abstract: Our daily lives revolve around sharing experiences and memories with others. When different people recount the same events, how similar are their underlying neural representations? In this study, participants viewed a fifty-minute audio-visual movie, then verbally described the events while undergoing functional MRI. These descriptions were completely unguided and highly detailed, lasting for up to forty minutes. As each person spoke, event-specific spatial patterns were reinstated (movie-vs.-recall correlation) in default network, medial temporal, and high-level visual areas; moreover, individual event patterns were highly discriminable and similar between people during recollection (recall-vs.-recall similarity), suggesting the existence of spatially organized memory representations. In posterior medial cortex, medial prefrontal cortex, and angular gyrus, activity patterns during recall were more similar between people than to patterns elicited by the movie, indicating systematic reshaping of percept into memory across individuals. These results reveal striking similarity in how neural activity underlying real-life memories is organized and transformed in the brains of different people as they speak spontaneously about past events.
Description: Download the README.txt file for a detailed description of this dataset's content
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01nz8062179
Referenced By: doi:10.1101/035931
Appears in Collections:Research Data Sets

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README_published.txt20.56 kBTextView/Download
RecallFiles_published.tgz5.05 GBArchiveView/Download
SherlockMovies_published.tgz11.17 GBArchiveView/Download


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