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Brain area may support fact and event memory. (Neural Recall).


A small, inner-brain region called the hippocampus hippocampus

fabulous marine creature; half fish, half horse. [Rom. Myth. and Art: Hall, 154]

See : Monsters
 boasts a well-earned reputation as a memory hub. However, researchers disagree about whether the hippocampus specializes in remembering only experiences or instead coordinates recall of both experiences and factual information.

Support for the structure's double-barreled role comes from a group of six adults who suffered rare brain damage limited largely to the hippocampus. The analysis appears in a pair of reports in the April 10 Neuron neuron, specialized cell in animals that, as a unit of the nervous system, carries information by receiving and transmitting electrical impulses.
neuron
 or nerve cell

Any of the cells of the nervous system.
.

"It looks like the human hippocampus is normally needed for semantic [factual] memories as well as for episodic episodic

sporadic; occurring in episodes. e. falling a paroxymal disorder described in Cavalier King Charles spaniels in which affected dogs, starting at an early age, experience episodes of extensor rigidity, possibly brought on by stress. e.
 [event] memories," says Larry R. Squire of the University of California, San Diego UCSD is consistently ranked among the top ten public universities for undergraduate education in the United States by U.S. News & World Report.[3] It is a Public Ivy. [1] For graduate studies, most of UCSD's Ph.D.  in La Jolla La Jolla (lə hoi`yə), on the Pacific Ocean, S Calif., an uninc. district within the confines of San Diego; founded 1869. The beautiful ocean beaches, in particular La Jolla shores and Black's Beach, and sea-washed caves attract visitors and , who directed the investigations.

Passage of time loosens the injured hippocampus' cloaking of both forms of memory, Squire adds. All six brain-damaged patients remembered facts and events from more than a decade before their injuries occurred. They largely lacked recollections for material encountered in the 10 years before hippocampus damage and in its aftermath.

The patients, ages 36 to 64, had developed brain damage and memory loss after age 30 as a result of medical conditions See carpal tunnel syndrome, computer vision syndrome, dry eyes and deep vein thrombosis.  such as viral encephalitis viral encephalitis Viral meningoencephalitis Neurology, infectious disease A general term for nonpurulent–'aseptic' viral infection of the CNS Etiology Coxsackie A and B–eg, A7, enterovirus 71, herpes simplex, etc Clinical If the viral load is extreme, .

The first study explored factual memory. Five of the patients and 12 adults with uninjured brains answered multiple-choice questions about notable news events that occurred between 1950 and 2002.

Then, all six patients and 14 adults with healthy brains heard a list of famous and fictitious names. Famous names referred to people who became well known before 1970. Half remain alive today, and half had died between 1990 and 2001. Participants decided whether each name referred to a famous person and, if so, whether that person was still alive.

Patients remembered little about news events that happened after they suffered brain damage or in the 10 years before, Squire's team found. However, patients and healthy adults alike recalled much of the news from the distant past and identified most of the famous people they had known about for decades. Only the patients, though, couldn't remember which famous people had died since 1990.

In a second study, the six patients with hippocampus damage and two others with broader injuries to the brain region that includes the hippocampus reported detailed autobiographical memories from childhood and adolescence. Their reports contained as much detail, including factual information, as those of 25 healthy adults. Previous studies had documented amnesia amnesia (ămnē`zhə), [Gr.,=forgetfulness], condition characterized by loss of memory for long or short intervals of time. It may be caused by injury, shock, senility, severe illness, or mental disease.  in these patients for personal events that occurred in the years shortly before and after their injuries.

In a commentary published with the new studies, Wendy A. Suzuki of New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the  says the findings contrast with an earlier report that three children with hippocampus damage retained enough new factual knowledge to perform adequately in school.

The brain may undergo dramatic reorganization to shore up factual memories after hippocampus damage in childhood, Suzuki proposes. It's also possible that even without marked brain changes, memories of day-to-day experiences in the classroom enable such children to pass their tests, Squire says.
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Article Details
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Author:Bower, B.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 19, 2003
Words:490
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