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Behavioural and magnetoencephalographic evidence for the interaction between semantic and episodic memory in healthy elderly subjects
Authors:La Corte Valentina  Dalla Barba Gianfranco  Lemaréchal Jean-Didier  Garnero Line  George Nathalie
Affiliation:Centre de Recherche de l'Institut du Cerveau et de la Moelle épinière (CRICM), UMR-S975, Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris6, 47, bd de l'H?pital, Batiment ICM, 3ème étage- Pièce 3.002, 75651, Paris, France, valentina.la_corte@etu.upmc.fr.
Abstract:The relationship between episodic and semantic memory systems has long been debated. Some authors argue that episodic memory is contingent on semantic memory (Tulving 1984), while others postulate that both systems are independent since they can be selectively damaged (Squire 1987). The interaction between these memory systems is particularly important in the elderly, since the dissociation of episodic and semantic memory defects characterize different aging-related pathologies. Here, we investigated the interaction between semantic knowledge and episodic memory processes associated with faces in elderly subjects using an experimental paradigm where the semantic encoding of famous and unknown faces was compared to their episodic recognition. Results showed that the level of semantic awareness of items affected the recognition of those items in the episodic memory task. Event-related magnetic fields confirmed this interaction between episodic and semantic memory: ERFs related to the old/new effect during the episodic task were markedly different for famous and unknown faces. The old/new effect for famous faces involved sustained activities maximal over right temporal sensors, showing a spatio-temporal pattern partly similar to that found for famous versus unknown faces during the semantic task. By contrast, an old/new effect for unknown faces was observed on left parieto-occipital sensors. These findings suggest that the episodic memory for famous faces activated the retrieval of stored semantic information, whereas it was based on items' perceptual features for unknown faces. Overall, our results show that semantic information interfered markedly with episodic memory processes and suggested that the neural substrates of these two memory systems overlap.
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