https://www.selleckchem.com/pr....oducts/fti-277-hcl.h
Our memories enable us to form expectations for our future experiences, yet the precise neural mechanisms underlying how we compare any experience to our memory remain unknown. Here, using intracranial EEG recordings, we show that episodic memories formed after a single visual experience establish expectations for future experience within neocortical-medial temporal lobe circuits. When subsequent experiences violate these expectations, we find a 80-120 Hz prediction error signal that emerges in both visual association areas and the