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Contributions of the medial temporal lobe to declarative memory retrieval: Manipulating the amount of contextual retrieval
Author(s) -
Indira Tendolkar,
Jennifer Arnold,
Karl Magnus Petersson,
Susanne Weis,
Anke BrockhausDumke,
Philip van Eijndhoven,
Jan K. Buitelaar,
Guillén Fernández
Publication year - 2008
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.916708
Subject(s) - perirhinal cortex , psychology , temporal lobe , context (archaeology) , recognition memory , episodic memory , hippocampus , semantic memory , cognitive psychology , parahippocampal gyrus , cognition , neuroscience , paleontology , epilepsy , biology
We investigated how the hippocampus and its adjacent mediotemporal structures contribute to contextual and noncontextual declarative memory retrieval by manipulating the amount of contextual information across two levels of the same contextual dimension in a source memory task. A first analysis identified medial temporal lobe (MTL) substructures mediating either contextual or noncontextual retrieval. A linearly weighted analysis elucidated which MTL substructures show a gradually increasing neural activity, depending on the amount of contextual information retrieved. A hippocampal engagement was found during both levels of source memory but not during item memory retrieval. The anterior MTL including the perirhinal cortex was only engaged during item memory retrieval by an activity decrease. Only the posterior parahippocampal cortex showed an activation increasing with the amount of contextual information retrieved. If one assumes a roughly linear relationship between the blood-oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal and the associated cognitive process, our results suggest that the posterior parahippocampal cortex is involved in contextual retrieval on the basis of memory strength while the hippocampus processes representations of item-context binding. The anterior MTL including perirhinal cortex seems to be particularly engaged in familiarity-based item recognition. If one assumes departure from linearity, however, our results can also be explained by one-dimensional modulation of memory strength.

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