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Lila Davachi

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  134
Citations -  12689

Lila Davachi is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Episodic memory & Hippocampus. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 120 publications receiving 10802 citations. Previous affiliations of Lila Davachi include New York University & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Item, context and relational episodic encoding in humans

TL;DR: Emerging findings demonstrate that thelevel of engagement of perirhinal cortex predicts later memory for individual items, whereas the level of hippocampal processing correlates with later relational memory, or recovery of additional episodic details, and provide emerging evidence for domain-specificity within the perirHinal and parahippocampal cortices.
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Multiple routes to memory: Distinct medial temporal lobe processes build item and source memories

TL;DR: This work used event-related functional MRI to examine the relation between activation in distinct medial temporal lobe subregions during memory formation and the ability to later recognize an item as previously encountered and later recollect specific contextual details about the prior encounter.
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Enhanced Brain Correlations during Rest Are Related to Memory for Recent Experiences

TL;DR: Data show enhanced functional connectivity between the hippocampus and a portion of the lateral occipital complex (LO) during rest following a task with high subsequent memory compared to pretask baseline resting connectivity, and the magnitude of hippocampal-LO correlations during posttask rest predicts individual differences in later associative memory.
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Hippocampal Contributions to Episodic Encoding: Insights From Relational and Item-Based Learning

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the hippocampus, while engaged during item-based working memory maintenance, differentially subserves the relational binding of items into an integrated memory trace so that the experience can be later remembered.
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Functional-neuroanatomic correlates of recollection: implications for models of recognition memory.

TL;DR: Results revealed that multiple left prefrontal cortical regions were engaged during attempts to recollect previous contextual details, regardless of the nature of the to-be-recollected details and of source recollection outcome (successful vs unsuccessful).