| Literature DB >> 25368566 |
Giridhar P Kalamangalam1, Timothy M Ellmore2.
Abstract
The capacity for semantic memory-the ability to acquire and store knowledge of the world-is highly developed in the human brain. In particular, semantic memory assimilated through an auditory route may be a uniquely human capacity. One method of obtaining neurobiological insight into memory mechanisms is through the study of experts. In this work, we study a group of Hindu Vedic priests, whose religious training requires the memorization of vast tracts of scriptural texts through an oral tradition, recalled spontaneously during a lifetime of subsequent spiritual practice. We demonstrate focal increases of cortical thickness in regions of the left prefrontal lobe and right temporal lobe in Vedic priests, in comparison to a group of matched controls. The findings are relevant to current hypotheses regarding cognitive processes underlying storage and recall of long-term declarative memory.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; hemispheric encoding and retrieval asymmetry (HERA); hippocampus; prefrontal cortex; temporal lobe
Year: 2014 PMID: 25368566 PMCID: PMC4202711 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Total cortical gray matter volume, left and right mean cortical thickness, and thickness data of significant clusters for all 22 subjects.
There were no systematic differences between the two groups for the first three measures. The priest group however exhibited appreciably larger mean thickness in the two cluster locations that were confirmed statistically significant (underlined bold numbers; see text). STDEV, standard deviation; NS, normal (control) subject.
Figure 1Significant thickness clusters displayed over the pial surface reconstruction of FREESURFER's average template brain. (A,B) Inferior and medial views of the left hemisphere, show a single cluster extending over the medial, ventral and polar orbito-frontal cortex. (C,D) Inferior and lateral views of the right hemisphere show a larger cluster occupying the middle inferior temporal neocortex, over the inferior temporal gyrus, the inferior temporal sulcus and part of the middle temporal gyrus. Key: STG, superior temporal gyrus; MTG, middle temporal gyrus; ITG, inferior temporal gyrus; FG, fusiform gyrus; PHG, parahippocampal gyrus; SFG, superior frontal gyrus; GR, gyrus rectus; MOG, medial orbital gyrus.