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Processing content or location: Distinct brain activation in a memory task

✍ Scribed by Valerie Treyer; Alfred Buck; Armin Schnider


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
213 KB
Volume
15
Category
Article
ISSN
1050-9631

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Objects are defined by their content ("what") and by their location ("where"). In the visual system, processing of these two types of information is segregated into distinct anatomical and functional pathways. Using H2 (15)O positron emission tomography to measure cerebral blood flow, we examined the differences in processing of "what" when compared with "where" information in human memory. We found that the detection of deviations from a previously learned image sequence activates distinct brain regions depending on whether the image's content or its location has changed. When deviations of an image's content had to be detected, the left medial temporal lobe (MTL) activation increased. In contrast, detection of deviations from the learned locations of the objects induced increased activation in the right MTL and in the right parietal cortex. These data demonstrate distinct contributions of the left and right MTL to the processing of "what" vs. "where" in memory.


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Human Brain Mapping sincerely regrets the omission of acknowledging Dr. Cohen and his colleagues for their contribution of the cover image for Volume I , Number 4. The figure and legend are reproduced below. Functional MRI image overlaid on a surface rendering of a conventional MRI image, acquired