TY - JOUR
T1 - Dissociation between the neural correlates of recollection and familiarity in the striatum and hippocampus
T2 - Across-study convergence
AU - King, Danielle R.
AU - Chastelaine, Marianne de
AU - Elward, Rachael L.
AU - Wang, Tracy H.
AU - Rugg, Michael D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2017/8/10
Y1 - 2017/8/10
N2 - In tests of recognition memory, neural activity in the striatum has consistently been reported to differ according to the study status of the test item. A full understanding of the functional significance of striatal ‘retrieval success’ effects is impeded by a paucity of evidence concerning whether the effects differ according to the nature of the memory signal supporting the recognition judgment (recollection vs. familiarity). Here, we address this issue through an analysis of retrieval-related striatal activity in three independent fMRI studies (total N = 88). Recollection and familiarity were operationalized in a different way in each study, allowing the identification of test-independent, generic recollection- and familiarity-related effects. While activity in a bilateral dorsal striatal region, mainly encompassing the caudate nucleus, was enhanced equally by recollected and ‘familiar only’ test items, activity in bilateral ventral striatum and adjacent subgenual frontal cortex was enhanced only in response to items that elicited successful recollection. By contrast, relative to familiar items, activity in anterior hippocampus was enhanced for both recollected and novel test items. Thus, recollection- and familiarity-driven recognition memory judgments are associated with anatomically distinct patterns of retrieval-related striatal activity, and these patterns are at least partially independent of recollection and novelty effects in the hippocampus.
AB - In tests of recognition memory, neural activity in the striatum has consistently been reported to differ according to the study status of the test item. A full understanding of the functional significance of striatal ‘retrieval success’ effects is impeded by a paucity of evidence concerning whether the effects differ according to the nature of the memory signal supporting the recognition judgment (recollection vs. familiarity). Here, we address this issue through an analysis of retrieval-related striatal activity in three independent fMRI studies (total N = 88). Recollection and familiarity were operationalized in a different way in each study, allowing the identification of test-independent, generic recollection- and familiarity-related effects. While activity in a bilateral dorsal striatal region, mainly encompassing the caudate nucleus, was enhanced equally by recollected and ‘familiar only’ test items, activity in bilateral ventral striatum and adjacent subgenual frontal cortex was enhanced only in response to items that elicited successful recollection. By contrast, relative to familiar items, activity in anterior hippocampus was enhanced for both recollected and novel test items. Thus, recollection- and familiarity-driven recognition memory judgments are associated with anatomically distinct patterns of retrieval-related striatal activity, and these patterns are at least partially independent of recollection and novelty effects in the hippocampus.
KW - Familiarity
KW - Novelty
KW - Recognition memory
KW - Recollection
KW - Reward
KW - Striatum
KW - Subgenual
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85027547379&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bbr.2017.07.031
DO - 10.1016/j.bbr.2017.07.031
M3 - Article
SN - 0166-4328
VL - 354
SP - 1
EP - 7
JO - Behavioural Brain Research
JF - Behavioural Brain Research
ER -