| June
1, 2005
UCSD/VA Team Identifies Where Life's Memories Are
Stored
By Leslie Franz
By studying in
detail the ability of patients with selective brain damage to
recall events in their past, researchers have helped settle
a long-standing controversy about where the long-term memory
of one's personal experiences are stored.
The research, led by
Larry R. Squire, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry, neurosciences
and psychology at the University of California, San Diego and
research career scientist at the San Diego Veterans Affairs
Health System, is published in the June 2 issue of Neuron.
The controversy has
revolved around whether long-term memory continues to depend
on the region called the medial temporal lobe, which contains
the brain's memory-processing center, the hippocampus. According
to this view, such "autobiographical" memories depend
on specific contextual information that would require the continued
involvement of the brain's central memory structures.
The other view is that
autobiographical memories, like other types of shorter-term
memories, gradually become independent of the medial temporal
lobe as time passes.
Memory studies of brain-damaged
patients have not yielded a clear winner, because of the complexity
of such damage and the difficulty in accurately documenting
the quality of such memories.
Now, Squire and his
colleagues have presented evidence that "the ability to
recollect remote autobiographical events depends not on the
medial temporal lobe but on widely distributed neocortical areas."
In their experiments,
Squire and his colleagues studied patients with damage limited
to the medial temporal lobe as well as those with broader damage
to the neocortex. The damage was due to such problems as ischemia
due to drug overdose, brain aneurysm, or encephalitis.
They triggered patients'
long-term memories by presenting them with "cue" words
such as "river," "bottle," and "nail."
The scientists asked the patients to recall events in their
lives associated with those words. They then asked the patients
to rate the quality of those memories.
Specifically, they
asked the patients to distinguish "remembering" the
event versus "knowing" the event. "Remembering"
meant that the patients could place themselves in the event,
while "knowing" meant that they knew it happened to
them, but could not "travel back in time" to re-experience
the event. The researchers also asked the patients to score
the vividness of the recalled imagery and whether they recalled
the event from the first-person perspective. They compared the
performance of the patients to that of a normal control group.
"There were two
major findings," reported the researchers. "First,
the patients with damage restricted mainly to the medial temporal
lobe performed normally on tests of remote autobiographical
memory, whereas the patients with significant damage to the
neocortex were severely impaired.
"Second, by three
measures…the subjective experience of remote autobiographical
recollection was normal in the five patients with damage restricted
mainly to the medial temporal lobe,” the team noted.
##
The researchers include
Peter J. Bayley and Jeffrey J. Gold of the University of California,
San Diego; Ramona O. Hopkins of Brigham Young University and
LDS Hospital; and Larry R. Squire of the University of California,
San Diego and Veterans Affairs Medical Center. This work received
support from the Medical Research Service of the Department
of Veterans Affairs, the National Institute of Mental Health
(NIMH), and the Metropolitan Life Foundation.
News
Media Contact: Leslie Franz
(619) 543-6163
|