| Literature DB >> 24399944 |
Céline Souchay1, Bérengère Guillery-Girard2, Katalin Pauly-Takacs3, Dominika Zofia Wojcik4, Francis Eustache2.
Abstract
Episodic retrieval is characterized by the subjective experience of remembering. This experience enables the co-ordination of memory retrieval processes and can be acted on metacognitively. In successful retrieval, the feeling of remembering may be accompanied by recall of important contextual information. On the other hand, when people fail (or struggle) to retrieve information, other feelings, thoughts, and information may come to mind. In this review, we examine the subjective and metacognitive basis of episodic memory function from a neurodevelopmental perspective, looking at recollection paradigms (such as source memory, and the report of recollective experience) and metacognitive paradigms such as the feeling of knowing). We start by considering healthy development, and provide a brief review of the development of episodic memory, with a particular focus on the ability of children to report first-person experiences of remembering. We then consider neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) such as amnesia acquired in infancy, autism, Williams syndrome, Down syndrome, or 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. This review shows that different episodic processes develop at different rates, and that across a broad set of different NDDs there are various types of episodic memory impairment, each with possibly a different character. This literature is in agreement with the idea that episodic memory is a multifaceted process.Entities:
Keywords: episodic memory; metamemory; neurodevelopmental disorders; recollection
Year: 2013 PMID: 24399944 PMCID: PMC3872323 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Gray matter maturation from 8 to 30 years: regression plots showing the relationship between age and bilateral cortical volume (corrected for the total brain volume) of each lobe and the hippocampus. The non-linear decrease in cortical lobe volume contrasts with a slight increase in hippocampal volume. Parietal and occipital lobe seem to mature earlier than temporal and frontal lobes. Adapted from Ostby et al. (2009).
Key findings on episodic memory and metamemory in children and adolescents with anoxia, brain tumor, and traumatic brain injury.
| Article/etiology | Age (years) | Main finding | |
|---|---|---|---|
| At injury | At test | ||
| Ostergaard ( | 10 (single case) | 15 | Residual learning in the absence of measurable episodic memory |
| Broman et al. ( | 8 (single case) | 27 | Severe episodic memory deficits |
| Vargha-Khadem et al. ( | Perinatal (single cases) | 14, 19, 22 | Profound episodic memory deficit in the context of normal knowledge acquisition during childhood |
| Baddeley et al. ( | Perinatal (single case) | 23 | Jon’s recognition memory is selectively supported by familiarity. Difficulty appreciating the difference between |
| Picard et al. ( | Perinatal 1 month | 18, 19 | No sense of recollection associated to bilateral hippocampal atrophy |
| Rosenbaum et al. ( | Perinatal (single case) | 20 | Greater deficit in recollection than in familiarity |
| Guillery-Girard et al. ( | 3 and 6 (single cases) | 10, 11 | Ability to acquire novel semantic concepts despite profound episodic memory deficits |
| Martins et al. ( | 6 and 5 (single cases) | 9.5, 7 | |
| Vicari et al. ( | 3 (single case) | 8 | Profound episodic memory deficits with generally preserved semantic memory competencies |
| Svoboda et al. ( | 13 (single case) | 18 | Severe episodic memory impairment with relatively well preserved general intellectual functioning |
| Pauly-Takacs et al. ( | 11 (single case) | 14 | Profound episodic memory deficit in the context of well preserved premorbid semantic memory and new semantic learning. Lack of insight into own memory processes |
| Hanten et al. ( | 6 | 11 | Verbal learning is within normal limits, but metacognitive predictions are less accurate compared to controls |
| Hanten et al. ( | 7 | 12 | Verbal learning and metacognitive monitoring are within normal limits, but ease-of-learning judgments are less accurate compared to controls |
| Crowther et al. ( | 10 | 10–12 | Verbal learning and metamemory poorer in children with severe TBI compared to milder forms of TBI and controls |
Key findings on episodic memory and metamemory in Autism.
| Reference | Age (years) | Main finding |
|---|---|---|
| Boucher and Warrington ( | 9 (Exp. 1), 13 (Exp. 2), 12 (Exp. 3), 10 (Exp. 4), 14 (Exp. 5) | Impaired recall and recognition and spared cued recall in ASD |
| Lind and Bowler ( | 8 | Spared performance on a delayed self-recognition task |
| Bowler et al. ( | 33 (Exp1), 33 (Exp. 2), 35 (Exp. 3) | Fewer Remember responses in Asperger syndrome |
| Gras-Vincendon et al. ( | 24 | Spared memory for temporal context |
| O’Shea et al. ( | 10 | Impaired source memory for social context |
| Salmond et al. ( | 12 | Selective episodic memory impairment and preserved semantic memory |
| Souchay et al. ( | 14 | Spared recollection as tested by objective measures (source memory tasks), but relatively impaired recollection as tested by subjective measures (R/K paradigm) |
| Bowler et al. ( | 29 (Exp. 1 and 2) | Comparable to typical performance on illusory memory task, but memory characterized by a |
| Bennetto et al. ( | 16 | Impaired temporal order memory |
| Tanweer et al. ( | 34 | Poorer recall of AM in Asperger syndrome (AS). Personal memories recalled related to |
| Wilkinson et al. ( | 13 | Inaccurate metacognitive judgments-of-confidence in a face recognition task in children with ASD |
| Wojcik et al. ( | 11 | Accurate judgment of confidence on a self-performed action task |
| Wojcik et al. ( | 12 (Exp. 1), 13 (Exp. 2) | Spared immediate and delayed judgment-of-learning |
| Wojcik et al. ( | 12 | Impaired episodic FOK, spared semantic FOK |
Figure 2Metamemory findings in autism spectrum disorder.
Key findings on episodic memory and metamemory in children and adolescents with genetic disorders.
| Article/etiology | Age (years) | Main finding |
|---|---|---|
| Edgin et al. ( | 18 | Deficits in spatial and verbal associative memory compared to individuals with Down syndrome |
| Costanzo et al. ( | 20 | Reduced recollection and spared familiarity on the process dissociation procedure and task dissociation procedure |
| Jarrold et al. ( | 18 | Poor performance on long-term memory for visual information |
| Vicari et al. ( | 10 | Long-term memory deficit on verbal and visual tasks |
| Edgin et al. ( | 17 | Deficit in associative memory |
| Carlesimo et al. ( | 16 | Deficit in explicit memory, difficulties in organizing material at encoding, retrieval deficits |
| Jarrold et al. ( | 14 | Poor performance on long-term memory for visual information |
| Debbané et al. ( | 17 | Inefficient recollection-based retrieval, failure to correctly identify contextual information |
| Debbané et al. ( | 14 | More source errors, more confusions between exterior sources in which the self was not involved |