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Perception and the Medial Temporal Lobe: Evaluating the Current Evidence. Wendy Suzuki. Introduction. Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System (MTLMS) Hypothesis Subset of structures of MTL underlies learning and declarative/relational memory
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Perception and the Medial Temporal Lobe: Evaluating the Current Evidence Wendy Suzuki
Introduction • Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System (MTLMS) Hypothesis • Subset of structures of MTL underlies learning and declarative/relational memory • Structures: hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus (entorhinal cortex, perirhinal cortex, parahippocampal gyrus) • Not involved in perception • Perceptual-Mnemonic Hypothesis (of MTL function) • MTL involved in certain forms of high-level perception • Perirhinal cortex: visual object perception (feature ambiguity) • Hippocampus: perceptual processing of visual scenes
Aim and Argument • Aim • Evaluation of evidence supporting the perceptual-mnemonic hypothesis of MTL function • Argument • Evidence is not sufficient to support the notion that MTL plays an important role in perception
Evidence for the Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System:Patient H.M. • Age 27 • Suffered from Epilepsy • Treatment: • Bilateral resection of MTL, including anterior hippocampus (with atrophy to posterior part), dentate gyrus, parahippocampal gyrus (parahippocampal, entorhinal, & perirhinal cortices), and amygdala • Resulting behavioural changes: • Reduction in epileptic seizures • Severe, long-lasting memory impairment • Selective to declarative memory for facts and events • Procedural and implicit memory left intact
Evidence for the Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System:Animal Studies • Animal model of human amnesia confirmed behavioural observations in humans • Memory was severely impaired • Perceptual abilities spared • Mishkin (1978) • 1st researcher to replicate H.M.’s lesions in animals • Resulted in profound deficits on the delayed nonmatching-to-sample task
Evidence for the Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System:Conclusions • Evidence from human neuropsychological studies and animal lesion studies supports the MTLMS hypothesis • MTL plays a critical role in declarative/relational learning and memory • E.g. Associative learning/memory, recognition memory over long delay intervals • MTL is NOT a necessary structure for the online perceptual processing of sensory information • E.g. Features of sensory stimuli, differentiating between stimuli
Evidence for the Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System:Conclusions • Higher-order sensory information from sensory/ association areas projects to MTL • Information is associated together & used for learning & memory • However, MTL does NOT provide additional perceptual processing • Perceptual-Mnemonic Hypothesis • MTL uniquely involved high-level forms of perception
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysEacott et al (1994) • Bilateral lesions to entorhinal & perirhinal cortices • Difficult matching-to-sample task (see Figure) • Monkeys with lesions had more errors than controls • Delayed nonmatching-to-sample task • Monkeys with lesions had more errors than controls • Results from the difficult matching task were called into question by Buffalo & colleagues because some data left out of analyses
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysBuckley et al (2001) • Oddity discrimination task • Selectively targets perception and not memory
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysBuckley et al (2001) • Oddity discrimination task • Selectively targets perception and not memory • Monkeys with PC lesions do not differ from controls for simple or moderately complex discriminations • Monkey are impaired when complexity of discrimination increases • Taken as evidence for role of PC in higher-level perception • Problem: fails to account for contributions of associative learning and LT memory
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysBuckley et al (2001) • Associative learning: • Must associate or hold 3 similar faces in memory • Thus, may be impaired visual associative learning, rather than impaired visual perception • Robust evidence in literature supporting role of perirhinal cortex in associating visual stimuli together in memory (see Messinger et al 2001; Murray et al 1993; Sakai and Miyashita 1991) Buckley et al 2001
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysBuckley et al (2000) • Long term memory: • Monkey had prior exposure to all stimuli • Control monkeys may benefit from previous exposure, developing long-term memory for the faces • Thus, impaired associative learning or LT memory for individual scenes vs. impaired visual perception may explain deficits seen Buckley et al 2001
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysBussey et al (2003) • 1st task: Monkeys performed a simple visual discrimination task • 2nd task: Pictures were morphed to have more feature overlap • Monkeys with PC lesions significantly impaired on high feature overlap items • Problem: must compare the high feature overlap stimulus to the original target stimulus held in memory Bussey et al 2003
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysBaxter (2009) on Bussey et al (2002) • Task involved discrimination for low, intermediate, or high levels of feature ambiguity • Monkeys with PC lesions showed greatest impairment for learning stimuli with high feature ambiguity • Demands on learning and memory constant across conditions • Interpretation: cannot attribute deficits to learning or memory impairments • Problem: repeated exposure to the same features increases memory for those features
Perirhinal Lesions in MonkeysCONCLUSIONS • Evidence for the role of perirhinal cortex in perception is unconvincing • Experimental paradigms fail to isolate perceptual demands
Perirhinal Lesions in HumansStark & Squire (2000) • Tested amnesic patients using oddity discrimination task • No impairment on any tasks • Argument: when memory for task instructions is well controlled, no impairment on perceptual tasks • Lee et al (2005b) repeated the study, but increased perceptual difficulty • Increased stimulus set size • Incorporated a trial-unique task • 3 MTL patients impaired on the face/scene oddity tasks; 4 hippocampal patients impaired on trial unique scene task
Perirhinal Lesions in HumansLee et al (2005c) • Tested MTL-damaged and hippocampal-damaged patients on difficult visual discriminations
Perirhinal Lesions in HumansShrager et al (2006) • Replicated both tasks by Lee and colleagues (2005c)
Perirhinal Lesions in HumansShrager et al (2006) • Replicated both tasks from Lee and colleagues • Experiment 3: • Trial unique version of the visual discrimination task in experiment 2, but greater feature overlap
Perirhinal Lesions in HumansConflicting results? • Methodological differences • Differences in task design might account for discrepant results • Explains differences between Stark & Squire and Lee et al • Does NOT explain differences between Lee and Shrager • Brain Damage • Shrager patients: 2 MTL patients had extraneous damage to anterior temporal polar cortex, anterior insula, and fusiform gyrus • Lee patients: 3 MTL patients had similar extraneous damage as above, with 1 patient also having damage to lateral temporal cortex
Perirhinal Lesions in HumansConflicting results? • Accuracy of estimating brain damage • Subjective rating based on visual inspection using a 4 or 5 point scale • Only considers 9 temporal lobe regions • Large areas of tissue unexamined!
Conclusions • Recall: MTLMS hypothesis • MTL involved in declarative/relational learning and memory • Not involved in perception • Evaluating the Evidence: MTL involved in perception? • Unconvincing thus far • Animal studies limited by difficulty in parsing out memory from perception • Human studies limited by measurement and reporting of brain damage • Concluding Argument: MTL is involve in declarative/relational learning and memory with little or no involvement in perception