Skip to main content (Press Enter).
U.S. Air Force Logo
Home
Environment
Community Engagement
Honorary Commanders
About Us
Biographies
Emergency Management
CAF
SAPR
ADAPT
Helping Matrix
Base Directory
Questions
We Care
Home Life
Victim Support Services
Mental Wellness
Workplace
Physical Wellness
Financial Wellness
Units
Honor Guard Requests
Contact Us
Visitor Control Center
CAC/ID Card & DEERS Updates
Sexual Misconduct Disciplinary Actions
Dover AFB'S Area Defense Council
Dover Air Force Base
DAF EXECUTIVE ORDER IMPLEMENTATION
Public Affairs Support
News
Team Dover Newcomers
About Us
DVIDSVideoPlayer
Playlist:
Search Results
Video by Kevin D Schmidt
Player Embed Code:
Download
Embed
Share
Lila Davachi - Temporal Integration and Separation of Sequential Events in Memory
Air Force Research Laboratory
May 3, 2024 | 01:10:36
Abstract:
Lila Davachi is currently a Professor of Psychology at Columbia University. She received her bachelor’s degree in psychology from Barnard College and her Ph.D. in Neurobiology from Yale University. She then conducted her post-doctoral research at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology in the Brain and Cognitive sciences department. She started her research group at the New York University in 2004 where she was Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience and served as the Director of the Center for Learning, Memory and Emotion at New York University before moving to Columbia University in 2017. Her scientific contributions have shed light on how dynamic experiences are transformed into lasting memories and how they update knowledge. She places an emphasis on behavioral and neuroimaging investigations into how humans encode and consolidate their experiences and her work has led to several discoveries, including in the area of sequential event representations and the impact of post-encoding neural activity on memory. Lila is a recipient of the prestigious Young Investigator Award from the Cognitive Neuroscience Society in 2009, Columbia University’s Lenfest Distinguished Faculty Award, a Provost’s Senior Faculty Teaching Scholar and she is an elected member of the Society of Experimental Psychologists (SEP) and the Association for Psychological Sciences (APS).
"I will talk about how sequential event representations are formed, de novo covering our work in this area since our seminal paper in 2011 called 'What is an episode in episodic memory?"
Key Moments and Questions in the video include:
Introduction
Experience is like a flowing river…
What about reflecting backward?
What is an ‘episode’ in episodic memory?
Temporal organization of experience
Ezzyat-DuBrow-Davachi (EDD) Paradigm
Hypothesis
What are the neural mechanisms?
Sequential event integration and separation
Mnemonic chunking
Dual mechanisms?
What neural mechanisms support episodic chinking?
Boundary segmentation
Ramping activity within events predicts mnemonic chunking
Next Steps
Person, action, object
Spatial context
Temporal context
Sequences in context
Same event / Across events
Non-Boundary / Boundary
Neural Similarity
Neural similarity related to mnemonic proximity?
LO cortical working memory representation?
Are these sequential items now a single ‘memory’?
Recency Memory
Memory Conditions
No switch
switch
Boundaries reduce recency memory
Do the intervening representations bridge the gap?
Reactivation during recency judgements?
Classification results
Reactivation of intervening representations
Trial by trial BOLD response within and across events
Questions
More
Tags
quest
AFRL
Artificial Intelligence
consciousness
AFResearchLab
ACT3
More
Up Next
01:01:58
Kabrisky Memorial Lecture 2025
01:00:53
Michael Robinson - Topological Features in Large Language Models (and beyond?)
01:16:50
QuEST (2024-06-07) Benjamin Kuipers - Drinking From the Firehose of Experience
01:00:41
QuEST (2024-05-24 Joseph Houpt - Mathematical Psychology
01:23:26
Nikolaus Kriegeskorte - Comparing models by their predictions of representational geometries and topologies
Now Playing
Lila Davachi - Temporal Integration and Separation of Sequential Events in Memory
01:18:31
Dr. Yubei Chen
01:00:12
Anna Schapiro - Learning representations of specifics and generalities over time
59:49
Chris Baldassano - Studying memory in the brain with the Method of Loci
59:55
Memory Palace
01:00:41
QuEST Discussion - Memory Athletics Speed Card Methods
57:32
Tony & Michael Dottino - USA Memory Athletics Championships
01:00:07
QuEST - Creation of Flexible Memory
58:27
QuEST - Learning and Memory Conversation
01:16:00
Dr. Robert Stickgold - Sleep, Memory, and Dreams: A Unified View
More Videos