Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3072121 NeuroImage 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The successful retrieval effect refers to greater activation for items identified as old compared to those identified as new. This effect is particularly apparent in the ventral posterior parietal cortex (vPPC), though its functional properties remain unclear. In two experiments, we assessed the activation for old and new items during explicit and implicit tests of memory. In Experiment 1, significant effects were observed during explicit recognition performance and during an implicit lexical decision task. In both tasks, determining mnemonic status provides relevant information to task goals. Experiment 2 included a second implicit task in which determining mnemonic status was not relevant (color discrimination task). In this case, vPPC activation did not distinguish between old and new items. These findings suggest that automatic or implicit processes can drive retrieval-related activation in the vPPC, though such processes are gated by stimulus relevancy and task goals.

Research highlights► Automatic retrieval processes may drive successful retrieval effects during implicit retrieval. ► This effect is diminished when the relevance of processing mnemonic status is minimized. ► Ventral parietal activity may reflect target detection of signals arising in MTL.

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