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Representational account of memory: insights from aging and synesthesia

Representational account of memory: insights from aging and synesthesia
Representational account of memory: insights from aging and synesthesia
The representational account of memory envisages perception and memory to be on a continuum rather than in discretely divided brain systems [Bussey, T. J., & Saksida, L. M. Memory, perception, and the ventral visual-perirhinal-hippocampal stream: Thinking outside of the boxes. Hippocampus, 17, 898-908, 2007]. We tested this account using a novel between-group design with young grapheme-color synesthetes, older adults, and young controls. We investigated how the disparate sensory-perceptual abilities between these groups translated into associative memory performance for visual stimuli that do not induce synesthesia. ROI analyses of the entire ventral visual stream showed that associative retrieval (a pair-associate retrieved in the absence of a visual stimulus) yielded enhanced activity in young and older adults' visual regions relative to synesthetes, whereas associative recognition (deciding whether a visual stimulus was the correct pair-associate) was characterized by enhanced activity in synesthetes' visual regions relative to older adults. Whole-brain analyses at associative retrieval revealed an effect of age in early visual cortex, with older adults showing enhanced activity relative to synesthetes and young adults. At associative recognition, the group effect was reversed: Synesthetes showed significantly enhanced activity relative to young and older adults in early visual regions. The inverted group effects observed between retrieval and recognition indicate that reduced sensitivity in visual cortex (as in aging) comes with increased activity during top-down retrieval and decreased activity during bottom-up recognition, whereas enhanced sensitivity (as in synesthesia) shows the opposite pattern. Our results provide novel evidence for the direct contribution of perceptual mechanisms to visual associative memory based on the examples of synesthesia and aging.
Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging/physiology, Analysis of Variance, Association Learning/physiology, Brain/diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory/physiology, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Organ Size, Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology, Perceptual Disorders/diagnostic imaging, Synesthesia, Young Adult
0898-929X
1987-2002
Pfeifer, Gaby
5ad2b108-e9c1-4a06-b41e-ad056977d54d
Ward, Jamie
73a4612a-0cbd-441c-bcef-ba0216d17318
Chan, Dennis
1cb5f600-97fa-43d5-a8de-7b4e476149ff
Sigala, Natasha
26a38aa9-ef97-47d8-9b62-b2b048fd2361
Pfeifer, Gaby
5ad2b108-e9c1-4a06-b41e-ad056977d54d
Ward, Jamie
73a4612a-0cbd-441c-bcef-ba0216d17318
Chan, Dennis
1cb5f600-97fa-43d5-a8de-7b4e476149ff
Sigala, Natasha
26a38aa9-ef97-47d8-9b62-b2b048fd2361

Pfeifer, Gaby, Ward, Jamie, Chan, Dennis and Sigala, Natasha (2016) Representational account of memory: insights from aging and synesthesia. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 28 (12), 1987-2002. (doi:10.1162/jocn_a_01014).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The representational account of memory envisages perception and memory to be on a continuum rather than in discretely divided brain systems [Bussey, T. J., & Saksida, L. M. Memory, perception, and the ventral visual-perirhinal-hippocampal stream: Thinking outside of the boxes. Hippocampus, 17, 898-908, 2007]. We tested this account using a novel between-group design with young grapheme-color synesthetes, older adults, and young controls. We investigated how the disparate sensory-perceptual abilities between these groups translated into associative memory performance for visual stimuli that do not induce synesthesia. ROI analyses of the entire ventral visual stream showed that associative retrieval (a pair-associate retrieved in the absence of a visual stimulus) yielded enhanced activity in young and older adults' visual regions relative to synesthetes, whereas associative recognition (deciding whether a visual stimulus was the correct pair-associate) was characterized by enhanced activity in synesthetes' visual regions relative to older adults. Whole-brain analyses at associative retrieval revealed an effect of age in early visual cortex, with older adults showing enhanced activity relative to synesthetes and young adults. At associative recognition, the group effect was reversed: Synesthetes showed significantly enhanced activity relative to young and older adults in early visual regions. The inverted group effects observed between retrieval and recognition indicate that reduced sensitivity in visual cortex (as in aging) comes with increased activity during top-down retrieval and decreased activity during bottom-up recognition, whereas enhanced sensitivity (as in synesthesia) shows the opposite pattern. Our results provide novel evidence for the direct contribution of perceptual mechanisms to visual associative memory based on the examples of synesthesia and aging.

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More information

Published date: 1 December 2016
Keywords: Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging/physiology, Analysis of Variance, Association Learning/physiology, Brain/diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory/physiology, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Organ Size, Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology, Perceptual Disorders/diagnostic imaging, Synesthesia, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475514
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475514
ISSN: 0898-929X
PURE UUID: 39643825-c376-4b46-9aa5-8ac4d89950ee
ORCID for Gaby Pfeifer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8737-1255

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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2023 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:15

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Contributors

Author: Gaby Pfeifer ORCID iD
Author: Jamie Ward
Author: Dennis Chan
Author: Natasha Sigala

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