Recognition memory and the medial temporal lobe: From monkey research to human pathology

被引:11
|
作者
Meunier, M. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Barbeau, E. [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] INSERM, Lyon Neurosci Res Ctr, ImpAct Team, U1028, F-69500 Bron, France
[2] Ctr Hosp Vinatier, Lyon Neurosci Res Ctr, ImpAct Team, CNRS,UMR5292, F-69500 Bron, France
[3] Univ Lyon, F-69622 Villeurbanne, France
[4] CHU Purpan, Ctr Rech Cerveau & Cognit CerCo, CNRS CERCO UMR 5549, F-31052 Toulouse, France
[5] Univ Toulouse, CNRS, F-31077 Toulouse 4, France
关键词
Long-term memory; Recognition memory; Hippocampus; Parahippocampal region; Monkey; Amnesia; Alzheimer's disease; MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; RECEIVER-OPERATING CHARACTERISTICS; SELECTIVE HIPPOCAMPAL-LESIONS; DUAL-PROCESS MODEL; LONG-TERM-MEMORY; VISUAL RECOGNITION; ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE; PERIRHINAL CORTEX; RHESUS-MONKEYS; EXCITOTOXIC LESIONS;
D O I
10.1016/j.neurol.2013.01.623
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
This review provides a historical overview of decades of research on recognition memory, the process that allows both humans and animals to tell familiar from novel items. The emphasis is put on how monkey research improved our understanding of the medial temporal lobe (MTL) role and how tasks designed for monkeys influenced research in humans. The story starts in the early 1950s. Back then, memory was not a fashionable scientific topic. It was viewed as a function of the whole brain and not of specialized brain areas. All that changed in 1957-1958 when Brenda Milner, a neuropsychologist from Montreal, described patient H.M. He forgot all events as he lived them despite a fully preserved intelligence. He had received a MTL resection to relieve epilepsy. H.M. (19262008) would become the most influential patient in brain science. Which structures among those included in H.M.'s large lesion were important for recognition memory could not be evaluated in humans. It was gradually understood only after the successful development of a monkey model of human amnesia by Mishkin in 1978. Selective lesions and two behavioral tasks, delayed nonmatching-to-sample and visual paired comparison, were used to distinguish the contribution of the hippocampus from that of adjacent cortical areas. Driven by findings in non-human primates, human research on recognition memory is now trying to solve the question of whether the different structures composing MTL contributes to familiarity and recollection, the two possible forms taken by recognition. We described in particular two French patients, FRG and JMG, whose deficits support the currently dominant model attributing to the perirhinal cortex a critical role in recognition memory. Research on recognition memory has implications for the clinician as it may help understanding the cognitive deficits observed in different diseases. An illustration of such approach, linking basic and applied research, is provided for Alzheimer's disease. (C) 2013 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.
引用
收藏
页码:459 / 469
页数:11
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