Right Prefrontal Cortex Responds to Item Familiarity During a Memory Encoding Task
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Memory
- Vol. 7 (5-6) , 703-715
- https://doi.org/10.1080/096582199387814
Abstract
In a previous word-pair encoding study (Dolan & Fletcher, 1997), we examined the effect of introducing novelty, either in studied words or in their mutual associations. A left medial temporal lobe (MTL) sensitivity to novel words and left prefrontal cortex (PFC) to novel associations was observed. In this further report on the data, we explored the extent to which the right PFC, more generally implicated in retrieval operations (Fletcher, Frith, & Rugg, 1997), was sensitive to these manipulations. Specifically, we characterised changes associated with increasing familiarity of study material. We demonstrate that the response in right ventrolateral PFC is preferentially sensitive to a condition in which all material was familiar (that is, in which all material had been presented prior to scanning). A more dorsal region in right PFC was found to be relatively more active in association with a condition in which one item in the pair was familiar but was paired with a novel associate. Our results suggest that sensitivity to stimulus familiarity is expressed in right PFC, even within the context of an encoding task. The data also provide further evidence for functional heterogeneity within right PFC, with a more ventral region responding to familiarity of complete word pairs and a more dorsal region responding to familiar single words occurring in the context of new associative relationships.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- The functional roles of prefrontal cortex in episodic memory. II. RetrievalBrain, 1998
- Dissociating prefrontal and hippocampal function in episodic memory encodingNature, 1997
- Differential activation of the prefrontal cortex in successful and unsuccessful memory retrievalBrain, 1996
- Brain activity during memory retrievalBrain, 1996
- General and specific brain regions involved in encoding and retrieval of events: what, where, and when.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Memory for object features versus memory for object location: a positron-emission tomography study of encoding and retrieval processes.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Confabulation and the Control of RecollectionMemory, 1996
- Functional role of the prefrontal cortex in retrieval of memories: a PET studyNeuroReport, 1995
- Brain regions associated with acquisition and retrieval of verbal episodic memoryNature, 1994
- Statistical parametric maps in functional imaging: A general linear approachHuman Brain Mapping, 1994