Related Content
Search Google Scholar for:
More Information
Related Jobs from ScienceCareers
|
|
Science 15 October 2004: Vol. 306. no. 5695, pp. 435 - 440 DOI: 10.1126/science.1101864
|
|
Review
Cognitive Memory: Cellular and Network Machineries and Their Top-Down Control
Yasushi Miyashita
A brain-wide distributed network orchestrates cognitive memorizing and remembering of explicit memory (i.e., memory of facts and events). The network was initially identified in humans and is being systematically investigated in molecular/genetic, single-unit, lesion, and imaging studies in animals. The types of memory identified in humans are extended into animals as episodic-like (event) memory or semantic-like (fact) memory. The unique configurational association between environmental stimuli and behavioral context, which is likely the basis of episodic-like memory, depends on neural circuits in the medial temporal lobe, whereas memory traces representing repeated associations, which is likely the basis of semantic-like memory, are consolidated in the domain-specific regions in the temporal cortex. These regions are reactivated during remembering and contribute to the contents of a memory. Two types of retrieval signal reach the cortical representations. One runs from the frontal cortex for active (or effortful) retrieval (top-down signal), and the other spreads backward from the medial temporal lobe for automatic retrieval. By sending the top-down signal to the temporal cortex, frontal regions manipulate and organize to-be-remembered information, devise strategies for retrieval, and also monitor the outcome, with dissociated frontal regions making functionally separate contributions. The challenge is to understand the hierarchical interactions between these multiple cortical areas, not only with a correlational analysis but also with an interventional study demonstrating the causal necessity and the direction of the causality.
Department of Physiology, University of Tokyo School of Medicine, Hongo, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.
E-mail: yasushi_miyashita{at}m.u-tokyo.ac.jp
Read the Full Text
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
- Thoughts Not Our Own: Whatever Happened to Selective Attention?.
- B. M. Stafford (2009)
Theory Culture Society
26, 275-293
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Effects of Familiarity on Neural Activity in Monkey Inferior Temporal Lobe.
- B. Anderson, R. E.B. Mruczek, K. Kawasaki, and D. Sheinberg (2008)
Cereb Cortex
18, 2540-2552
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Internally Generated Reactivation of Single Neurons in Human Hippocampus During Free Recall.
- H. Gelbard-Sagiv, R. Mukamel, M. Harel, R. Malach, and I. Fried (2008)
Science
322, 96-101
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Functional Architecture and Spike Timing Properties of Corticofugal Projections From Rat Ventral Temporal Cortex.
- T. Chomiak, S. Peters, and B. Hu (2008)
J Neurophysiol
100, 327-335
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Neural Correlates of Availability and Accessibility in Memory.
- R. Habib and L. Nyberg (2008)
Cereb Cortex
18, 1720-1726
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Towards understanding of the cortical network underlying associative memory.
- T. Osada, Y. Adachi, H. M Kimura, and Y. Miyashita (2008)
Phil Trans R Soc B
363, 2187-2199
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- How Progesterone Impairs Memory for Biologically Salient Stimuli in Healthy Young Women.
- G. van Wingen, F. van Broekhoven, R. J. Verkes, K. M. Petersson, T. Backstrom, J. Buitelaar, and G. Fernandez (2007)
J. Neurosci.
27, 11416-11423
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Broad-Spectrum Efficacy across Cognitive Domains by {alpha}7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Agonism Correlates with Activation of ERK1/2 and CREB Phosphorylation Pathways.
- R. S. Bitner, W. H. Bunnelle, D. J. Anderson, C. A. Briggs, J. Buccafusco, P. Curzon, M. W. Decker, J. M. Frost, J. H. Gronlien, E. Gubbins, et al. (2007)
J. Neurosci.
27, 10578-10587
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Ventrolateral Prefrontal Neuronal Activity Related to Active Controlled Memory Retrieval in Nonhuman Primates.
- G. Cadoret and M. Petrides (2007)
Cereb Cortex
17, i27-i40
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Functional Interactions between Prefrontal and Visual Association Cortex Contribute to Top-Down Modulation of Visual Processing.
- A. Gazzaley, J. Rissman, J. Cooney, A. Rutman, T. Seibert, W. Clapp, and M. D'Esposito (2007)
Cereb Cortex
17, i125-i135
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Schemas and Memory Consolidation.
- D. Tse, R. F. Langston, M. Kakeyama, I. Bethus, P. A. Spooner, E. R. Wood, M. P. Witter, and R. G. M. Morris (2007)
Science
316, 76-82
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Context preexposure prevents forgetting of a contextual fear memory: Implication for regional changes in brain activation patterns associated with recent and remote memory tests.
- J. C. Biedenkapp and J. W. Rudy (2007)
Learn. Mem.
14, 200-203
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Temporal and spatial dynamics of brain structure changes during extensive learning..
- B. Draganski, C. Gaser, G. Kempermann, H. G. Kuhn, J. Winkler, C. Buchel, and A. May (2006)
J. Neurosci.
26, 6314-6317
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- From the Cover: Declarative memory consolidation in humans: A prospective functional magnetic resonance imaging study.
- A. Takashima, K. M. Petersson, F. Rutters, I. Tendolkar, O. Jensen, M. J. Zwarts, B. L. McNaughton, and G. Fernandez (2006)
PNAS
103, 756-761
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Fast track to the medial prefrontal cortex.
- P. W. Frankland and B. Bontempi (2006)
PNAS
103, 509-510
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Retrieval Attempts Transiently Interfere with Concurrent Encoding of Episodic Memories But Not Vice Versa.
- K. Allan and R. Allen (2005)
J. Neurosci.
25, 8122-8130
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Prefrontal cortex and the organization of recent and remote memories: An alternative view.
- J. W. Rudy, J. C. Biedenkapp, and R. C. O'Reilly (2005)
Learn. Mem.
12, 445-446
| Full Text »
| PDF »
|
|