Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7318607 | Neuropsychologia | 2016 | 35 Pages |
Abstract
Findings from the RiSE task demonstrated that adolescents with ASD do not always exhibit impaired memory for relational information as commonly believed. Instead, memory was worse when cognitive control demands were high, when encoding focused on specific item features, and when familiarity was used to retrieve relational information. Recognition also was better in older participants. This suggests that learning and memory deficits in adolescents with ASD, may not be due primarily to failed relational binding processes in the hippocampus but, rather to disrupted strategic memory and familiarity processes associated with the prefrontal and perirhinal cortices. These findings demonstrate the importance and utility of using well-validated cognitive neuroscience tasks and of considering the ages of participants when comparing the neural underpinnings of different memory processes in both typical and atypical populations.
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Neuroscience
Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
Marjorie Solomon, James B. McCauley, Ana-Maria Iosif, Cameron S. Carter, J. Daniel Ragland,