What , where and when : deconstructing memory
Author(s) -
Rachael E. S. Marshall,
T. Andrew Hurly,
Jenny Sturgeon,
David M. Shuker,
Susan D. Healy
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.342
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2013.2194
Subject(s) - episodic memory , task (project management) , reconstructive memory , event (particle physics) , semantic memory , cognitive psychology , psychology , context (archaeology) , computer science , cognitive science , explicit memory , cognition , neuroscience , history , physics , management , archaeology , quantum mechanics , economics
The ability of animals to remember the what , where and when of a unique past event is used as an animal equivalent to human episodic memory. We currently view episodic memory as reconstructive, with an event being remembered in the context in which it took place. Importantly, this means that the components of a what , where , when memory task should be dissociable (e.g. what would be remembered to a different degree than when ). We tested this hypothesis by training hummingbirds to a memory task, where the location of a reward was specified according to colour ( what ), location ( where ), and order and time of day ( when ). Although hummingbirds remembered these three pieces of information together more often than expected, there was a hierarchy as to how they were remembered. When seemed to be the hardest to remember, while errors relating to what were more easily corrected. Furthermore, when appears to have been encoded as a combination of time of day and sequence information. As hummingbirds solved this task using reconstruction of different memory components ( what , where and when ), we suggest that similar deconstructive approaches may offer a useful way to compare episodic and episodic-like memories.
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