| Literature DB >> 35704024 |
Abstract
New memories can strengthen old memories if the recent and past experience contain elements that are semantically related.Entities:
Keywords: human; memory; memory integration; memory reactivation; neuroscience; retroactive facilitation; retroactive interference; semantic memory
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35704024 PMCID: PMC9200402 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.80030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.713
Figure 1.Testing the interaction between semantically related memories.
(A) Seeing a snake in the zoo may cause you to recall an old related memory, such as the time you saw a snake in the wild or another dangerous experience, like being chased by a dog. (B) To test what happens to old memories when they are re-activated and associated with new experiences, Antony et al. carried out a series of associative learning experiments. First, participants were asked to memorize 45 pairs of words (base learning), comprised of a cue (sick) and target (push). They were then given a list of 36 secondary word pairs to learn which either had the same cues and targets (No Δ condition), a new target (Δ Target), a new cue (Δ Cue), or a new cue and a new target (Δ Both), which were semantically related to the words in the base pair. For example, the base pair ‘sick-push’ could lead to the secondary word pairs ‘sick-shove’ or ‘ill-push’. No secondary pairs were created for the control group. (C) The schematic depicts how each condition impacted the participants’ memory of the base pairs five minutes or 48 hours after the learning period. All three conditions in which the words in the secondary list were changed to semantically related words improved participants’ memory of the original list compared to the control (dark blue bar), with the Δ Cue condition (orange bar) causing the largest effect and the Δ Both (yellow bar) the smallest.