The neural correlates of conceptual and perceptual false recognition
- 1 October 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Learning & Memory
- Vol. 14 (10) , 684-692
- https://doi.org/10.1101/lm.695707
Abstract
False recognition, broadly defined as a claim to remember something that was not encountered previously, can arise for multiple reasons. For instance, a distinction can be made between conceptual false recognition (i.e., false alarms resulting from semantic or associative similarities between studied and tested items) and perceptual false recognition (i.e., false alarms resulting from physical similarities between studied and tested items). Although false recognition has been associated with frontal cortex activity, it is unclear whether this frontal activity can be modulated by the precise relationship between studied and falsely remembered items. We used event-related fMRI to examine the neural basis of conceptual compared with perceptual false recognition. Results revealed preferential activity in multiple frontal cortex regions during conceptual false recognition, which likely reflected increased semantic processing during conceptual (but not perceptual) memory errors. These results extend recent reports that different types of false recognition can rely on dissociable neural substrates, and they indicate that the frontal activity that is often observed during false compared with true recognition can be modulated by the relationship between studied and tested items.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissociated developmental trajectories for semantic and phonological false memoriesMemory, 2006
- The nature of memory related activity in early visual areasNeuropsychologia, 2006
- Emotional content and reality-monitoring ability: fMRI evidence for the influences of encoding processesNeuropsychologia, 2005
- Reductions in neural activity underlie behavioral components of repetition primingNature Neuroscience, 2005
- What Can Neuroimaging Tell Us About the Mind?Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2004
- Late frontal brain potentials distinguish true and false recognitionNeuroReport, 2003
- Distinct prefrontal cortex activity associated with item memory and source memory for visual shapesCognitive Brain Research, 2003
- Creating false memories with hybrid lists of semantic and phonological associates: Over-additive false memories produced by converging associative networksJournal of Memory and Language, 2003
- Creating false memories: Remembering words not presented in lists.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1995
- Memory and consciousness.Canadian Psychology / Psychologie canadienne, 1985