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Recollection and familiarity in recognition memory: an event-related fMRI study

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TLDR
It is suggested that the responses of different brain regions do dissociate according to the phenomenology associated with memory retrieval, as seen in hemodynamic responses associated with both studying and recognizing words.
Abstract
The question of whether recognition memory judgments with and without recollection reflect dissociable patterns of brain activity is unresolved. We used event-related, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of 12 healthy volunteers to measure hemodynamic responses associated with both studying and recognizing words. Volunteers made one of three judgments to each word during recognition: whether they recollected seeing it during study (R judgments), whether they experienced a feeling of familiarity in the absence of recollection(K judgments), or whether they did not remember seeing it during study (N judgments). Both R and K judgments for studied words were associated with enhanced responses in left prefrontal and left parietal cortices relative to N judgments for unstudied words. The opposite pattern was observed in bilateral temporoccipital regions and amygdalae. R judgments for studied words were associated with enhanced responses in anterior left prefrontal, left parietal, and posterior cingulate regions relative to K judgments. At study, a posterior left prefrontal region exhibited an enhanced response to words subsequently given R versus K judgments, but the response of this region during recognition did not differentiate R and K judgments. K judgments for studied words were associated with enhanced responses in right lateral and medial prefrontal cortex relative to both R judgments for studied words and N judgments for unstudied words, a difference we attribute to greater monitoring demands when memory judgments are less certain. These results suggest that the responses of different brain regions do dissociate according to the phenomenology associated with memory retrieval.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Nature of Recollection and Familiarity: A Review of 30 Years of Research

TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that recall is more sensitive than familiarity to response speeding, division of attention, generation, semantic encoding, the effects of aging, and the amnestic effects of benzodiazepines, while familiarity is less sensitive to shifts in response criterion, fluency manipulations, forgetting over short retention intervals, and some perceptual manipulations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recognition memory and the medial temporal lobe: a new perspective

TL;DR: The methods traditionally used to separate recollection from familiarity instead separate strong memories from weak memories, and it is suggested that these structures work together in a cooperative and complementary way.
Journal ArticleDOI

Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging: modelling, inference and optimization

TL;DR: These issues are reviewed, with particular emphasis on the use of basis functions within a general linear modelling framework to model and make inferences about the haemodynamic response in event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detecting latency differences in event-related BOLD responses: Application to words versus nonwords and initial versus repeated face presentations

TL;DR: A new method is introduced for detecting differences in the latency of blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) responses to brief events within the context of the General Linear Model using a first-order Taylor approximation in terms of the temporal derivative of a canonical hemodynamic response function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Confidence in Recognition Memory for Words: Dissociating Right Prefrontal Roles in Episodic Retrieval

TL;DR: These results further support the proposal that different subregions of the prefrontal cortex subserve different functions during episodic retrieval, and are discussed in relation to a monitoring process, which operates when familiarity levels are close to response criterion and is associated with nonconfident judgements, and a recollective process which isassociated with the confident recognition of old words.
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