2003
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0337195100
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Multiple routes to memory: Distinct medial temporal lobe processes build item and source memories

Abstract: A central function of memory is to permit an organism to distinguish between stimuli that have been previously encountered and those that are novel. Although the medial temporal lobe (which includes the hippocampus and surrounding perirhinal, parahippocampal, and entorhinal cortices) is known to be crucial for recognition memory, controversy remains regarding how the specific subregions within the medial temporal lobe contribute to recognition. We used event-related functional MRI to examine the relation betwe… Show more

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Cited by 805 publications
(765 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
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“…The key postulate is that perirhinal cortex can produce a familiarity signal sufficient for normal recognition on the forced-choice test with highly similar foils, which is consistent with other evidence suggesting that perirhinal cortex supports familiarity (Brown & Xiang, 1998;Davachi et al, 2003;Henson et al, 2003;Ranganath et al, 2004). However, the present data would cast doubt on a perirhinal proposal if this region were subject to severe dysfunction in MCI; further evidence on this point from AD and MCI patients is required given that even subtle pathology could have significant Figure 5.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…The key postulate is that perirhinal cortex can produce a familiarity signal sufficient for normal recognition on the forced-choice test with highly similar foils, which is consistent with other evidence suggesting that perirhinal cortex supports familiarity (Brown & Xiang, 1998;Davachi et al, 2003;Henson et al, 2003;Ranganath et al, 2004). However, the present data would cast doubt on a perirhinal proposal if this region were subject to severe dysfunction in MCI; further evidence on this point from AD and MCI patients is required given that even subtle pathology could have significant Figure 5.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…First, there are no obvious candidates for the role of intentionally directed compensatory processes that will produce normal familiarity. Second, there is growing evidence that the hippocampus is not engaged in normal people either by encoding that produced subsequent familiarity memory (Davachi, Mitchell, & Wagner, 2003;Ranganath et al, 2004) or by familiarity memory per se (Eldridge, Knowlton, Furmanski, Bookheimer, & Engel, 2000).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants were presented with either a previously studied or a novel word and then made 1 of 8 possible memory responses (Table 1). Stimuli consisted of 620 visually presented adjectives, taken from a corpus used in 2 prior fMRI studies (Davachi et al 2003;Kahn et al 2004). The adjectives ranged in length from 3 to 10 letters (mean = 6.93).…”
Section: Graded Memory Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%