Reevaluating the role of the hippocampus in memory: A meta‐analysis of neurotoxic lesion studies in nonhuman primates

Author:

Waters Spencer J.12ORCID,Basile Benjamin M.13ORCID,Murray Elisabeth A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Section on the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, Laboratory of Neuropsychology National Institute of Mental Health, NIH Bethesda Maryland USA

2. Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience Georgetown University Washington District of Columbia USA

3. Department of Psychology Dickinson College Carlisle Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractThe hippocampus and perirhinal cortex are both broadly implicated in memory; nevertheless, their relative contributions to visual item recognition and location memory remain disputed. Neuropsychological studies in nonhuman primates that examine memory function after selective damage to medial temporal lobe structures report various levels of memory impairment—ranging from minor deficits to profound amnesia. The discrepancies in published findings have complicated efforts to determine the exact magnitude of visual item recognition and location memory impairments following damage to the hippocampus and/or perirhinal cortex. To provide the most accurate estimate to date of the overall effect size, we use meta‐analytic techniques on data aggregated from 26 publications that assessed visual item recognition and/or location memory in nonhuman primates with and without selective neurotoxic lesions of the hippocampus or perirhinal cortex. We estimated the overall effect size, evaluated the relation between lesion extent and effect size, and investigated factors that may account for between‐study variation. Grouping studies by lesion target and testing method, separate meta‐analyses were conducted. One meta‐analysis indicated that impairments on tests of visual item recognition were larger after lesions of perirhinal cortex than after lesions of the hippocampus. A separate meta‐analysis showed that performance on tests of location memory was severely impaired by lesions of the hippocampus. For the most part, meta‐regressions indicated that greater impairment corresponds with greater lesion extent; paradoxically, however, more extensive hippocampal lesions predicted smaller impairments on tests of visual item recognition. We conclude the perirhinal cortex makes a larger contribution than the hippocampus to visual item recognition, and the hippocampus predominately contributes to spatial navigation.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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