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Growth points in research on memory and hippocampus.
Authors:Robert J Sutherland  Hugo Lehmann  Simon C Spanswick  Fraser T Sparks  Neal R Melvin
Institution:Department of Neuroscience, Canadian Centre for Behavioural Neuroscience, The University of Lethbridge, Alberta. robert.sutherland@uleth.ca
Abstract:We present an overview of two of our on-going projects relating processes in the hippocampus to memory. We are trying to understand why retrograde amnesia occurs after damage to the hippocampus. Our experiments establish the generality of several new retrograde amnesia phenomena that are at odds with the consensus view of the role of the hippocampus in memory. We show in many memory tasks that complete damage to the hippocampus produces retrograde amnesia that is equivalent for recent and remote memories. Retrograde amnesia affects a much wider range of memory tasks than anterograde amnesia. Normal hippocampal processes can interfere with retention of a long-term memory stored outside the hippocampus. We conclude that the hippocampus competes with nonhippocampal systems during memory encoding and retrieval. Finally, we outline a project to understand and manipulate adult hippocampal neurogenesis in order to repair damaged hippocampal circuitry to recover lost cognitive functions.
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