Title: Hippocampus and spatial memory
1Hippocampus and spatial memory
King, J. A., Trinkler, I., Hartley, T.,
Vargha-Khadem, F., Burgess, N. (2004). The
Hippocampal Role in Spatial Memory and the
Familiarity-Recollection Distinction A Case
Study. Neuropsychology. 18(3), 405-417. Muriel
Delsoin
2Who is Jon?What does he suffer from?
- He is an man who has developmental amnesia, and
suffers from perinatal anoxia. - -perinatal anoxia is lack of oxygen to the
brain. http//www.meritcare.com/specialties/rehab/
brain/abi/Anoxia/definition.aspx - His hippocampus is reduced in volume by 50. He
is impaired in episodic, temporal and spatial
memory.
3Jons ability to navigate visually was tested
using a video game. Duke Nukem (from 3D Realms
Entertainment, Dallas, TX) The video game
involves moving through a virtual scene, like a
town, and shooting enemy forces (aliens). He was
a good video game player in general, but his
navigation was inaccurate. He was also expected
to draw maps in the Speirs, Burgess et al. study
and his maps were also inaccurate. - This shows
his recollection impairment. - He also
could not recognize scenes from the virtual town
when such scenes were compared with foils, unlike
control subjects who could. - spatial memory
impairment. Â
4Jons memory deficits retrieval of episodic
events  comparing memory events content with
memory context of events retrieval of spatial
information comparing memory for object
locations from the same view as at presentation
with memory from a shifted viewpoint. Episodic
memory test within the VR town participants
follow a path and meeting with virtual
characters in different places and receiving a
different object each time, for a total of 16
objects. Context-dependent memory for each event
(the receipt of an object) was tested by
presenting 2 of the received objects next to a
location and a character and asking which
object had been received in that location or from
that character, or which had been received first
(see Figure 1). Recognition of the familiarity of
an object was tested by presenting a received
object and a similar looking foil and asking
which had previously been received.
5- Â
- Results
- Confirming his impaired episodic memory, Jon
performed - at chance on the context-dependent memory
questions but - was unimpaired on the object-recognition question
(Spiers, Burgess, - et al., 2001).
6- Jons spatial memory was investigated
- Used virtual reality paradigm (King et al.,
2002). - Jon views an array of placeholders, located in a
small town - square, while virtually looking down from the
surrounding - rooftops. A series of objects appears on random
placeholders, - and then Jon is tested by presenting each object
randomly in its original location, along with a
number of copies of each in foil locations. - -The task is to identify the one in the correct
original location. Between presentation and
testing, Jon either remains in the original
position or is moved instantly to a new location.
The difficulty of a condition can be varied with
the number of objects and foils. - -Jon using two foil objects at random locations.
- Results
- - showed good performance in the same-view
condition for short list - lengths, with performance reducing from near
ceiling to 50 for - List Length 10 (chance performance would be 33).
In the shifted- - view condition, he performed at chance for all
list lengths - greater than 1.
7- Jons relative impairment compared to control
participants in the shifted-view versus same view
conditions was not clear, so researchers tried to
reduce control participants performance overall,
by testing them with five randomly placed foil
objects. Now, Jons differential deficit at
shorter list lengths (4 and 7) became clear - - He performed significantly worse than
controls in the shifted-view condition and
performed better than them in the same-view
condition. Jons - impaired performance from a shifted view
indicates impaired - allocentric memory. By contrast, his relatively
preserved same view - performance on short lists could be due to
familiarity-based - recognition using preserved egocentric
representations. The size of - the differential deficit on short lists makes the
test a potentially - powerful indicator of hippocampal damage, given
Jons generally - spared recognition memory.
- It was concluded that Jons deficits in spatial
memory (from new viewpoints) show an inability to
store object locations in an allocentric
framework. A close relationship functioning of
episodic and spatial memory exists, in which the
hippocampus seems to be involved. - We learn that the hippocampus really is
associated with and influences spatial memory.
8Question
- Do the processes required by the allocentric
system relate to the hippocampal contribution to
context-dependent recognition and episodic
recollection?