Recent studies have suggested that the human posteromedial cortex (PMC), which includes core regions of the default mode network (DMN), plays an important role in episodic memory. Whereas various roles relating to self-relevant processing and memory retrieval have been attributed to different subsystems within this broad network, the nature of representations and the functional roles they support in these brain regions remain unspecified. Here, we describe the whole-brain networks that represent subjective, self-relevant aspects of real-world events during autobiographical recollection. Nine participants wore a device to record images from their lives for a period of two to four weeks (lifelogging phase) and indicated the personally salient attributes (i.e., personal semantics) of each episode by choosing multiple content tags. Two to four weeks after the lifelogging phase, participants relived their experiences in an fMRI scanner cued by images chosen from their own lives. Representational Similarity Analysis revealed a broad network, including parts of the DMN, that represented personal semantics during autobiographical reminiscence. Furthermore, within this network, the right precuneus represented personally relevant content during vivid recollection but not during non-vivid recollection. The precuneus is a hub within the DMN and has been implicated in metacognitive ability for memory retrieval. Our results suggest a more specific mechanism underlying the phenomenology of vivid reminiscence, supported by personal semantic representations in the precuneus.
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