Recent reports show that humans and animals do not acquire information about routes and object locations in the same way. In spatial memory, a specific sub-system is hypothesized to be involved in encoding, storing and recalling navigational information, and it is segregated from the sub-system devoted to small-scale environment. We assessed this hypothesis in a sample of patients treated surgically for intractable temporal lobe epilepsy. We found double dissociations between learning and recall of spatial positions in large space versus small space. These results strongly support the hypothesis that two segregate systems process navigational memory for large-scale environments and spatial memory in small-scale environments.

Different spatial memory systems are involved in small- and large-scale environments: evidence from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy / Piccardi, Laura; A., Berthoz; M., Baulac; M., Denos; S., Dupont; S., Samson; Guariglia, Cecilia. - In: EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH. - ISSN 0014-4819. - STAMPA. - 206:2(2010), pp. 171-177. [10.1007/s00221-010-2234-2]

Different spatial memory systems are involved in small- and large-scale environments: evidence from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy

PICCARDI, Laura;GUARIGLIA, Cecilia
2010

Abstract

Recent reports show that humans and animals do not acquire information about routes and object locations in the same way. In spatial memory, a specific sub-system is hypothesized to be involved in encoding, storing and recalling navigational information, and it is segregated from the sub-system devoted to small-scale environment. We assessed this hypothesis in a sample of patients treated surgically for intractable temporal lobe epilepsy. We found double dissociations between learning and recall of spatial positions in large space versus small space. These results strongly support the hypothesis that two segregate systems process navigational memory for large-scale environments and spatial memory in small-scale environments.
2010
topographical memory; object-location memory; human navigation; hippocampal patients; corsi block-tapping test
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Different spatial memory systems are involved in small- and large-scale environments: evidence from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy / Piccardi, Laura; A., Berthoz; M., Baulac; M., Denos; S., Dupont; S., Samson; Guariglia, Cecilia. - In: EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH. - ISSN 0014-4819. - STAMPA. - 206:2(2010), pp. 171-177. [10.1007/s00221-010-2234-2]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/46256
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