The first items (SP1) across adjacent lists share a boundary representation.
A. A schematic showing the comparison of SP1 to every item in the adjacent three lists. B. The mean parameter estimate of the predictor for boundary proximity contrasted by region for all item pairs (left; LTC: n=81, mean β=0.020; HC: n=76, mean β=0.022; MPL: n=83, mean β=0.042). The parameter estimate of recalled-only pairs and non-recalled pairs is also shown for the MPL (right; recalled: pink, mean β=0.045; non-recalled: orange, mean β=0.027). C. Correlation of proportion of recalled SP1 by subject to the parameter estimate for boundary proximity (ordinary least squares regression, r=0.41, p=1.1 × 10−4. D. Design of the GLM used to fit adjacent list similarity in the MPL. The response variable (similarity to list x, SP1; gray, top) shown for an example subject with the model prediction (orange, top) overlayed. The predictor variables, boundary proximity (middle) and list distance (gray, bottom), are also shown. E. Mean similarity of all serial positions to the reference item (list x, SP1) regardless of recollection (top). Below, the mean similarity of only instances where both list x, SP1 and the target item are recalled are shown for all serial positions in adjacent lists (list x+1, x+2, x+3; bottom). The error bars demonstrate variation in average similarity between participants. All error bars indicate ±1 SEM. ∗ p < 0.05
Figure 3—figure supplement 1. Serial position 1 does not show boundary representation in the hippocampus and lateral temporal cortex.
Figure 3—figure supplement 2. Boundary information is represented in multiple principal components