Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W200605510> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 67 of
67
with 100 items per page.
- W200605510 abstract "Exploring how the medial temporal lobe interacts with different areas of the brain during memory tasks is an important component in understanding the dynamics of memory retrieval. To achieve this goal, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to determine how the frontal and medial temporal lobes interact during memory retrieval and subsequent use of recollected information and how memory retrieval may integrate with or affect default network activity. The first study used blocked and event-related fMRI to examine hippocampal activity during long term memory recollection and post- retrieval processing of paired items. Subjects were asked to make living/nonliving judgments about items visually presented (classify) or about items retrieved from memory (recollect-classify). In addition, active (odd/even digit classification) and passive (fixation) baselines were used to differentiate task-related activity from default network activations. During the recollect-classify' task, activity in the anterior hippocampus was selectively reduced relative to 'classify' and baseline tasks (active and passive), and hippocampal activity was inversely correlated with bilateral DLPFC activity. The finding was that frontal and hippocampal activity are dissociated during memory retrieval and post-retrieval processing. The second study examined the effects of retrieval instruction on brain regions implicated in episodic memory retrieval. The finding was that the default network showed a greater decrease in activation for poorly-remembered than strongly -remembered responses regardless of whether subjects were instructed to suppress the cued material or to perform non -elaborative or elaborative retrieval. The hippocampus showed an increase in activation only with successful memory recall. Further examination revealed that the retrieval network, commonly identified by differences in activation during successful retrieval and baseline, seems to be modulated somewhat by task instruction, but not recall success. The hippocampus showed differential activity based on top-down modulation elicited by retrieval instructions while the default network did not. The third study examined recollection and familiarity with attention to reaction-time to explore its contribution to regional activations. The finding was that the hippocampus is functionally dissociated from other regions of the retrieval-network during recollection. Portions of the retrieval-network are generally influenced by reaction- time and show suppressed signal when subjects are task- engaged in either recollection or familiarity; suppression is greater for longer trials. The hippocampus, however, shows a positive response only for recollection trials, where activation is greater for longer recollection trials, but not longer familiarity trials. It is concluded from these experiments that the hippocampus is dissociated from the rest of the default network during tasks of memory retrieval. While many studies have examined how the hippocampus, pre-frontal cortex, retrieval network, and default network are related to memory retrieval, these studies take into account additional components of the memory retrieval tasks like reaction time and false alarm rate in order to disentangle memory retrieval itself from related components. Prior studies have shown functional connectivity of the hippocampus and the default network, but these studies, taken together, suggest that hippocampus is affected by task instruction as well as task success, and is dissociated from the default network during tasks involving memory retrieval. The summation of these studies exposes how the modulation of activity in non-memory related networks in the brain may affect activation attributed to memory retrieval, and why it is so important to take these confounds into account in memory recall studies" @default.
- W200605510 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W200605510 creator A5034473159 @default.
- W200605510 date "2010-01-01" @default.
- W200605510 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W200605510 title "Imaging frontal and medial temporal lobe interaction during memory retrieval and disentangling the effects of the default network" @default.
- W200605510 hasPublicationYear "2010" @default.
- W200605510 type Work @default.
- W200605510 sameAs 200605510 @default.
- W200605510 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W200605510 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W200605510 hasAuthorship W200605510A5034473159 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C100660578 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C120843803 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C148762608 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C169900460 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C180747234 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C197914299 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C2778186239 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C2779226451 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C2781099131 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C2781161787 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C522805319 @default.
- W200605510 hasConcept C88576662 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C100660578 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C120843803 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C148762608 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C15744967 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C169760540 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C169900460 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C180747234 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C197914299 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C2778186239 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C2779226451 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C2781099131 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C2781161787 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C522805319 @default.
- W200605510 hasConceptScore W200605510C88576662 @default.
- W200605510 hasLocation W2006055101 @default.
- W200605510 hasOpenAccess W200605510 @default.
- W200605510 hasPrimaryLocation W2006055101 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W1600886258 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W1605881086 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2046037140 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2069349748 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2076244934 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2084100081 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2086588701 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2093474018 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2101181555 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2123727119 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2132494120 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2150309334 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2151892678 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2156152753 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2173476601 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2509512843 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W3029534544 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W3081893523 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2185393438 @default.
- W200605510 hasRelatedWork W2341436030 @default.
- W200605510 isParatext "false" @default.
- W200605510 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W200605510 magId "200605510" @default.
- W200605510 workType "article" @default.