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Multimodal Integration and Vividness in the Angular Gyrus During Episodic Encoding and Retrieval.

Authors :
Tibon, Roni
Fuhrmann, Delia
Levy, Daniel A.
Simons, Jon S.
Henson, Richard N.
Source :
Journal of Neuroscience. 5/29/2019, Vol. 39 Issue 22, p4365-4374. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Much evidence suggests that the angular gyrus (AnG) is involved in episodic memory, but its precise role has yet to be determined. We examined two possible accounts within the same experimental paradigm: the "cortical binding of relational activity" (CoBRA) account (Shimamura, 2011), which suggests that the AnG acts as a convergence zone that binds multimodal episodic features, and the subjectivity account (Yazar et al, 2012), which implicates AnG involvement in subjective mnemonic experience (such as vividness or confidence). fMRI was used during both encoding and retrieval of paired associates. During study, female and male human participants memorized picture-pairs of common objects (in the unimodal task) or of an object-picture and an environmental sound (in the crossmodal task). At test, they performed a cued-recall task and further indicated the vividness of their memory. During retrieval, BOLD activation in the AnG was greatest for vividly remembered associates, consistent with the subjectivity account. During encoding, the same effect of vividness was found, but this was further modulated by task: greater activations were associated with subsequent recall in the crossmodal than the unimodal task. Therefore, encoding data suggest an additional role to the AnG in crossmodal integration, consistent with its role at retrieval proposed by CoBRA. These results resolve some of the puzzles in the literature and indicate that the AnG can play different roles during encoding and retrieval as determined by the cognitive demands posed by different mnemonic tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02706474
Volume :
39
Issue :
22
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
136784203
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2102-18.2018