Priming for novel between-word associations in patients with organic amnesia
- 26 August 2005
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
- Vol. 11 (05) , 566-73
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s1355617705050678
Abstract
Ten amnesic patients of various etiologies and 10 matched normal controls participated in this study. On 2 consecutive days, subjects studied 30 novel word-word associations 6 times. Using a cued recall task, we assessed episodic learning and delayed retention of the study material immediately after each study phase and again 24 hr after the final study phase. Further, we evaluated implicit memory for new between-word associations by means of an automatic relational priming paradigm immediately after the delayed cued recall trial. Amnesic patients performed poorly on the cued recall task. Moreover, in the overall group of amnesics the priming effect failed to reach statistical significance. When the overall group of amnesics was split according to mean performance on the cued recall task, those in the low performer subgroup--comprised of 6 patients with direct or indirect involvement of the hippocampi--were particularly poor at episodically remembering the associations and did not reveal any relational priming. These data support the hypothesis of similar impairment of new episodic and implicit learning in amnesic patients and suggest that the hippocampus is crucial for both kinds of new learning.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Amnesia following Endoscopic Third Ventriculostomy: A Single Case StudyEuropean Neurology, 2004
- Intact implicit memory for newly formed verbal associations in amnesic patients following single study trials.Neuropsychology, 2000
- Automatic Priming Effects for New Associations in Lexical Decision and Perceptual IdentificationThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1999
- Do Novel Associative Word Stem Completion and Cued Recall Share the Same Memory Retrieval Processes?Memory, 1999
- Preservation of Implicit Memory for New Associations in Global AmnesiaPsychological Science, 1997
- Memory for Items and Memory for Relations in the Procedural/Declarative Memory FrameworkMemory, 1997
- Item and Order Recognition Memory in Subjects with Hypoxic Brain InjuryBrain and Cognition, 1995
- Preserved learning in amnesic patients: Perspectives from research on direct primingJournal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 1986
- Amnesia after operations on aneurysms of the anterior communicating arterySurgical Neurology, 1982
- Evidence against a semantic-episodic distinction.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1980