Memory integration in amnesia: Prior knowledge supports verbal short-term memory

被引:18
|
作者
Race, Elizabeth [1 ]
Palombo, Daniela J.
Cadden, Margaret
Burke, Keely
Verfaellie, Mieke
机构
[1] VA Boston Healthcare Syst, Memory Disorders Res Ctr, Boston, MA 02130 USA
关键词
Amnesia; Hippocampus; Medial temporal lobe; Schema; Long-term memory; MEDIAL TEMPORAL-LOBE; SELECTIVE HIPPOCAMPAL-LESIONS; VISUAL WORKING-MEMORY; EPISODIC BUFFER; LOCATION ASSOCIATIONS; RELATIONAL BINDING; IMPLICIT BINDING; RECOGNITION; LONG; INFORMATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2015.02.004
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Short-term memory (STM) and long-term memory (LTM) have traditionally been considered cognitively distinct. However, it is known that STM can improve when to-be-remembered information appears in contexts that make contact with prior knowledge, suggesting a more interactive relationship between STM and LTM. The current study investigated whether the ability to leverage LTM in support of STM critically depends on the integrity of the hippocampus. Specifically, we investigated whether the hippocampus differentially supports between-domain versus within-domain STM-LTM integration given prior evidence that the representational domain of the elements being integrated in memory is a critical determinant of whether memory performance depends on the hippocampus. In Experiment 1, we investigated hippocampal contributions to within-domain STM-LTM integration by testing whether immediate verbal recall of words improves in MTL amnesic patients when words are presented in familiar verbal contexts (meaningful sentences) compared to unfamiliar verbal contexts (random word lists). Patients demonstrated a robust sentence superiority effect, whereby verbal STM performance improved in familiar compared to unfamiliar verbal contexts, and the magnitude of this effect did not differ from that in controls. In Experiment 2, we investigated hippocampal contributions to between-domain STM-LTM integration by testing whether immediate verbal recall of digits improves in MTL amnesic patients when digits are presented in a familiar visuospatial context (a typical keypad layout) compared to an unfamiliar visuospatial context (a random keypad layout). Immediate verbal recall improved in both patients and controls when digits were presented in the familiar compared to the unfamiliar keypad array, indicating a preserved ability to integrate activated verbal information with stored visuospatial knowledge. Together, these results demonstrate that immediate verbal recall in amnesia can benefit from two distinct types of semantic support, verbal and visuospatial, and that the hippocampus is not critical for leveraging stored semantic knowledge to improve memory performance. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:272 / 280
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] An embedded computational framework of memory: Accounting for the influence of semantic information in verbal short-term memory
    Guitard, Dominic
    Saint-Aubin, Jean
    Reid, J. Nick
    Jamieson, Randall K.
    JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 2025, 140
  • [22] Musicians' and nonmusicians' short-term memory for verbal and musical sequences: Comparing phonological similarity and pitch proximity
    Williamson, Victoria J.
    Baddeley, Alan D.
    Hitch, Graham J.
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2010, 38 (02) : 163 - 175
  • [23] Treadmill Exercise Ameliorates Short-Term Memory Disturbance in Scopolamine-Induced Amnesia Rats
    Heo, Yu-Mi
    Shin, Mal-Soon
    Lee, Jae-Min
    Kim, Chang-Ju
    Baek, Sang-Bin
    Kim, Khae-Hawn
    Baek, Seung-Soo
    INTERNATIONAL NEUROUROLOGY JOURNAL, 2014, 18 (01) : 16 - 22
  • [24] Comparisons between short-term memory systems for verbal and rhythmic stimuli
    Hoddinott, Joshua D.
    Schuit, Dirk
    Grahn, Jessica A.
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2021, 163
  • [25] Neural Evidence for a Distinction between Short-term Memory and the Focus of Attention
    Lewis-Peacock, Jarrod A.
    Drysdale, Andrew T.
    Oberauer, Klaus
    Postle, Bradley R.
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2012, 24 (01) : 61 - 79
  • [26] The neural correlates of verbal short-term memory in Alzheimer's disease: an fMRI study
    Peters, Frederic
    Collette, Fabienne
    Degueldre, Christian
    Sterpenich, Virginie
    Majerus, Steve
    Salmon, Eric
    BRAIN, 2009, 132 : 1833 - 1846
  • [27] Maintaining verbal short-term memory representations in non-perceptual parietal regions
    Yue, Qiuhai
    Martin, Randi C.
    CORTEX, 2021, 138 : 72 - 89
  • [28] Cross-frequency coupling in cortico-hippocampal networks supports the maintenance of sequential auditory information in short-term memory
    Borderie, Arthur
    Caclin, Anne
    Lachaux, Jean-Philippe
    Perrone-Bertollotti, Marcela
    Hoyer, Roxane S.
    Kahane, Philippe
    Catenoix, Helene
    Tillmann, Barbara
    Albouy, Philippe
    PLOS BIOLOGY, 2024, 22 (03)
  • [29] The Representation of Order Information in Auditory-Verbal Short-Term Memory
    Kalm, Kristjan
    Norris, Dennis
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 34 (20) : 6879 - 6886
  • [30] Evidence for Decay in Verbal Short-Term Memory: A Commentary on Berman, Jonides, and Lewis (2009)
    Campoy, Guillermo
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2012, 38 (04) : 1129 - 1136