Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6263284 | Brain Research | 2014 | 11 Pages |
â¢We use forced-choice recognition to classify study ERP data into four categories.â¢We examine the differences between familiarity, remember and priming at encoding.â¢Distinct neural events during encoding predict later remembering and knowing.â¢Distinct neural events during encoding predict later knowing and priming.â¢Different neural processing at encoding support familiarity, remember and priming.
The distinction between neural mechanisms of explicit and implicit expressions of memory has been well studied at the retrieval stage, but less at encoding. In addition, dissociations obtained in many studies are complicated by methodological difficulties in obtaining process-pure measures of different types of memory. In this experiment, we applied a subsequent memory paradigm and a two-stage forced-choice recognition test to classify study ERP data into four categories: subsequent remembered (later retrieved accompanied by detailed information), subsequent known (later retrieved accompanied by a feeling of familiarity), subsequent primed (later retrieved without conscious awareness) and subsequent forgotten (not retrieved). Differences in subsequent memory effects (DM effects) were measured by comparing ERP waveform associated with later memory based on recollection, familiarity or priming with ERP waveform for later forgotten items. The recollection DM effect involved a robust sustained (onset at 300Â ms) prefrontal positive-going DM effect which was right-lateralized, and a later (onset at 800Â ms) occipital negative-going DM effect. Familiarity involved an earlier (300-400Â ms) prefrontal positive-going DM effect and a later (500-600Â ms) parietal positive-going DM effect. Priming involved a negative-going DM effect which onset at 600Â ms, mainly distributed over anterior brain sites. These results revealed a sequence of components that represented cognitive processes underlying the encoding of verbal information into episodic memory, and separately supported later remembering, knowing and priming.