Literature DB >> 17853413

Memory for familiar environments learned in the remote past: fMRI studies of healthy people and an amnesic person with extensive bilateral hippocampal lesions.

R Shayna Rosenbaum1, Gordon Winocur, Cheryl L Grady, Marilyne Ziegler, Morris Moscovitch.   

Abstract

Preserved remote spatial memory in amnesic people with bilateral hippocampal damage, including the well-studied case K.C., challenges spatial theories, which assume that the hippocampus is needed to support all allocentric spatial representations, old or new. It remains possible, however, that residual hippocampal tissue is functional and contributes to successful performance. Here, we examine brain activity with fMRI during the retrieval of spatial information in K.C. and in healthy controls using landmark and route stimuli from a premorbidly familiar neighborhood that K.C. can navigate normally. In all participants, activity was found in the parahippocampal cortex, but not in the hippocampus itself, during all navigational tasks on which K.C. performs well, even though part of his hippocampus remains viable. The opposite pattern was observed on a house recognition task, which is inconsequential to navigation, and on which K.C. performed poorly. On that task, K.C. recruited the right hippocampus presumably because even "familiar" houses were treated as novel by him, whereas controls recruited occipitotemporal cortex, including parahippocampal cortex. The distinction between recent and remote memory, therefore, may apply as much to spatial theories of hippocampal function as it does to theories emphasizing the role of the hippocampus in other types of explicit memory. (c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17853413     DOI: 10.1002/hipo.20354

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hippocampus        ISSN: 1050-9631            Impact factor:   3.899


  19 in total

1.  Familiar environments enhance object and spatial memory in both younger and older adults.

Authors:  Niamh A Merriman; Jan Ondřej; Eugenie Roudaia; Carol O'Sullivan; Fiona N Newell
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2016-01-28       Impact factor: 1.972

2.  Functional MRI at the crossroads.

Authors:  John Darrell Van Horn; Russell A Poldrack
Journal:  Int J Psychophysiol       Date:  2008-11-18       Impact factor: 2.997

3.  Identifying task-general effects of stimulus familiarity in the parietal memory network.

Authors:  Adrian W Gilmore; Sarah E Kalinowski; Shawn C Milleville; Stephen J Gotts; Alex Martin
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2019-01-02       Impact factor: 3.139

4.  Disentangling spatial perception and spatial memory in the hippocampus: a univariate and multivariate pattern analysis fMRI study.

Authors:  Andy C H Lee; Kay H Brodersen; Sarah R Rudebeck
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2012-09-27       Impact factor: 3.225

5.  Scene construction in amnesia: an FMRI study.

Authors:  Sinéad L Mullally; Demis Hassabis; Eleanor A Maguire
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-04-18       Impact factor: 6.167

6.  3alpha-androstanediol, but not testosterone, attenuates age-related decrements in cognitive, anxiety, and depressive behavior of male rats.

Authors:  Cheryl A Frye; Kassandra L Edinger; Edwin D Lephart; Alicia A Walf
Journal:  Front Aging Neurosci       Date:  2010-04-08       Impact factor: 5.750

Review 7.  Parahippocampal and retrosplenial contributions to human spatial navigation.

Authors:  Russell A Epstein
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2008-08-28       Impact factor: 20.229

8.  Complementary roles of human hippocampal subregions during retrieval of spatiotemporal context.

Authors:  Milagros S Copara; Abdul S Hassan; Colin T Kyle; Laura A Libby; Charan Ranganath; Arne D Ekstrom
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-05-14       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Remote spatial memory in aging: all is not lost.

Authors:  R Shayna Rosenbaum; Gordon Winocur; Malcolm A Binns; Morris Moscovitch
Journal:  Front Aging Neurosci       Date:  2012-09-13       Impact factor: 5.750

10.  Autobiographical memory in semantic dementia: a longitudinal fMRI study.

Authors:  Eleanor A Maguire; Dharshan Kumaran; Demis Hassabis; Michael D Kopelman
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 3.139

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