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- Title
Intermediate Levels of Hippocampal Activity Appear Optimal for Associative Memory Formation.
- Authors
Xiao Liu; Shaozheng Qin; Rijpkema, Mark; Jing Luo; Fernández, Guillén
- Abstract
Background: It is well established that hippocampal activity is positively related to effective associative memory formation. However, in biological systems often optimal levels of activity are contrasted by both sub- and supra-optimal levels. Suboptimal levels of hippocampal activity are commonly attributed to unsuccessful memory formation, whereas the supraoptimal levels of hippocampal activity related to unsuccessful memory formation have been rarely studied. It is still unclear under what circumstances such supra-optimal levels of hippocampal activity occur. To clarify this issue, we aimed at creating a condition, in which supra-optimal hippocampal activity is associated with encoding failure. We assumed that such supra-optimal activity occurs when task-relevant information is embedded in task-irrelevant, distracting information, which can be considered as noise. Methodology/Principal Findings: In the present fMRI study, we probed neural correlates of associative memory formation in a full-factorial design with associative memory (subsequently remembered versus forgotten) and noise (induced by high versus low distraction) as factors. Results showed that encoding failure was associated with supra-optimal activity in the high-distraction condition and with sub-optimal activity in the low distraction condition. Thus, we revealed evidence for a bell-shape function relating hippocampal activity with associative encoding success. Conclusions/Significance: Our findings indicate that intermediate levels of hippocampal activity are optimal while both too low and too high levels appear detrimental for associative memory formation. Supra-optimal levels of hippocampal activity seem to occur when task-irrelevant information is added to task-relevant signal. If such task-irrelevant noise is reduced adequately, hippocampal activity is lower and thus optimal for associative memory formation.
- Subjects
HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain); MEMORY; NOISE &; psychology; BIOLOGICAL systems; DISTRACTION; HUMAN information processing; BRAIN stimulation
- Publication
PLoS ONE, 2010, Vol 5, Issue 10, p1
- ISSN
1932-6203
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0013147