Literature DB >> 23197413

Losing sight of the future: Impaired semantic prospection following medial temporal lobe lesions.

Elizabeth Race1, Margaret M Keane, Mieke Verfaellie.   

Abstract

The ability to imagine the future (prospection) relies on many of the same brain regions that support memory for the past. To date, scientific research has primarily focused on the neural substrates of episodic forms of prospection (mental simulation of spatiotemporally specific future events); however, little is known about the neural substrates of semantic prospection (mental simulation of future nonpersonal facts). Of particular interest is the role of the medial temporal lobes (MTLs), and specifically the hippocampus. Although the hippocampus has been proposed to play a key role in episodic prospection, recent evidence suggests that it may not play a similar role in semantic prospection. To examine this possibility, amnesic patients with MTL lesions were asked to imagine future issues occurring in the public domain. The results showed that patients could list general semantic facts about the future, but when probed to elaborate, patients produced impoverished descriptions that lacked semantic detail. This impairment occurred despite intact performance on standard neuropsychological tests of semantic processing and did not simply reflect deficits in narrative construction. The performance of a patient with damage limited to the hippocampus was similar to that of the remaining patients with MTL lesions and amnesic patients' impaired elaboration of the semantic future correlated with their impaired elaboration of the semantic past. Together, these results provide novel evidence from MTL amnesia that memory and prospection are linked in the semantic domain and reveal that the MTLs play a critical role in the construction of detailed, multi-element semantic simulations.
Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  amnesia; episodic memory; hippocampus; imagination; semantic memory

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23197413      PMCID: PMC3628277          DOI: 10.1002/hipo.22084

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


  61 in total

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2.  Medial temporal lobe damage causes deficits in episodic memory and episodic future thinking not attributable to deficits in narrative construction.

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  32 in total

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4.  Medial temporal and neocortical contributions to remote memory for semantic narratives: evidence from amnesia.

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5.  Navigating life.

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9.  MEDIAL TEMPORAL LOBE CONTRIBUTIONS TO FUTURE THINKING: EVIDENCE FROM NEUROIMAGING AND AMNESIA.

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10.  Identifying the Neural Substrates of Procrastination: a Resting-State fMRI Study.

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