Author:
Sommer Tobias,Rose Michael,Gläscher Jan,Wolbers Thomas,Büchel Christian
Abstract
The crucial role of the medial temporal lobe (MTL) in episodic memory is
well established. Although there is little doubt that its anatomical
subregions—the hippocampus, peri-, entorhinal and parahippocampal cortex
(PHC)—contribute differentially to mnemonic processes, their specific
functions in episodic memory are under debate. Data from animal, human lesion,
and neuroimaging studies suggest somewhat contradictory perspectives on this
functional specialization: a general participation in declarative memory, an
exclusive involvement in associative mnemonic processes, and a specific
contribution to spatial memory are reported for the hippocampus, adjacent
cortices, and the PHC. A functional lateralization in humans dependent on the
verbalizability of the material is also discussed herein. To further elucidate
the differential contributions of the various MTL subregions to encoding, we
employed an object-location association memory paradigm. The memory for each
of the studied associations was tested twice: by the object, and by the
location serving as retrieval cue. The memory accuracy in response to both cue
types was also assessed parametrically. Brain activity during encoding which
leads to different degrees of subsequent memory accuracy under the two
retrieval conditions was compared. We found the bilateral posterior PHC to
participate in encoding of both the object associated with a location and the
location associated with an object. In contrast, activity in an area in the
left anterior PHC and the right anterior MTL was only correlated with the
memory for the location associated with an object.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
94 articles.
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