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Hippocampal Complex Contribution to Retention and Retrieval of Recent and Remote Episodic and Semantic Memories: Evidence from Behavioral and Neuroimaging Studies of Healthy and Brain-Damaged People

Authors :
Fuqiang Gao
Cheryl L. Grady
Mary Pat McAndrews
Sandra Priselac
R. Shayna Rosenbaum
Donna Rose Addis
Robyn Westmacott
Eva Svoboda
Morris Moscovitch
Lynn Nadel
Asaf Gilboa
Brian Richards
Marilyne Ziegler
Stefan Köhler
Gordon Winocur
Brian Levine
Guy B. Proulx
Sandra E. Black
Morris Freedman
Lee Ryan
Indre Viskontas
Kathryn A. Stokes
Larry Leach
Source :
Dynamic Cognitive Processes ISBN: 4431239995
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Springer-Verlag, 2006.

Abstract

For over a hundred years, it has been accepted that remote memories are less vulnerable to disruption than are recent memories. The standard consolidation model posits that the hippocampus and related structures are temporary memory structures, necessary for acquisition, retention, and retrieval of all explicit (declarative) memories until they are consolidated elsewhere in the brain. We review lesion and neuroimaging evidence showing that important distinctions exist among different types of explicit memory and the structures that mediate them. We argue that retention and retrieval of detailed, vivid autobiographical memories depend on the hippocampal system no matter how long ago they were acquired. Semantic memories, on the other hand, benefit from hippocampal contribution for some time before they can be retrieved independently of the hippocampus. Even semantic memories, however, can have episodic elements associated with them which continue to depend on the hippocampus. In short, the evidence reviewed suggests strongly that the function of the hippocampus (and possibly of related limbic structures) is to help encode, retain, and retrieve experiences, no matter how long ago the events comprising the experience occurred. We conclude that the evidence favors a multiple trace theory (MTT) of memory over the traditional model, and we indicate what future work is needed to resolve disputes.

Details

ISBN :
978-4-431-23999-4
4-431-23999-5
ISBNs :
9784431239994 and 4431239995
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Dynamic Cognitive Processes ISBN: 4431239995
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........97ba69c6be07da11db0faefa013f4d7d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/4-431-27431-6_14