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Activation of Midbrain Structures by Associative Novelty and the Formation of Explicit Memory in Humans
Author(s) -
Björn H. Schott,
Daniela B. Sellner,
Corinna-J. Lauer,
Reza Habib,
Julietta U. Frey,
Sebastian Guderian,
Hans-Jochen Heinze,
Emrah Düzel
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
learning and memory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.228
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1549-5485
pISSN - 1072-0502
DOI - 10.1101/lm.75004
Subject(s) - ventral tegmental area , neuroscience , novelty , midbrain , psychology , substantia nigra , hippocampus , recall , content addressable memory , associative learning , hippocampal formation , dopaminergic , associative property , cognitive psychology , dopamine , central nervous system , computer science , artificial intelligence , social psychology , mathematics , pure mathematics , artificial neural network
Recent evidence suggests a close functional relationship between memory formation in the hippocampus and dopaminergic neuromodulation originating in the ventral tegmental area and medial substantia nigra of the midbrain. Here we report midbrain activation in two functional MRI studies of visual memory in healthy young adults. In the first study, participants distinguished between familiar and novel configurations of pairs of items which had been studied together by either learning the location or the identity of the items. In the second study, participants studied words by either rating the words' pleasantness or counting syllables. The ventral tegmental area and medial substantia nigra showed increased activation by associative novelty (first study) and subsequent free recall performance (second study). In both studies, this activation accompanied hippocampal activation, but was unaffected by the study task. Thus midbrain regions seem to participate selectively in hippocampus-dependent processes of associative novelty and explicit memory formation, but appear to be unaffected by other task-relevant aspects.

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