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Role of Hippocampus in Memory01:19

Role of Hippocampus in Memory

The hippocampus, a critical brain structure, plays an essential role in memory processing, particularly in the formation and retrieval of memory. This small, seahorse-shaped region is located within the medial temporal lobe, with one hippocampus in each brain hemisphere. Experimental studies involving lesions in the hippocampi of rats have demonstrated significant impairments in tasks such as object recognition and maze navigation, indicating the hippocampus involvement in both recognition and...
Explicit Memories01:27

Explicit Memories

Explicit memories, also known as declarative memories, are consciously remembered, recalled, and reported. Studying for a chemistry exam involves material that will become part of explicit memory. There are two types of explicit memory: episodic and semantic.
Episodic memory contains information about personally experienced events and is reported as a story. An example of episodic memory is recalling a birthday celebration. This type of memory includes the what, where, and when of an event, as...
Higher Mental Functions of Brain: Learning and Memory01:26

Higher Mental Functions of Brain: Learning and Memory

Memory is one of the most vital higher mental functions of the brain. Memory is closely related to learning because it enables us to retain information and experiences from our past to use them in our present life. It also helps us to remember facts, events, and skills, such as riding a bike or swimming. There are two types of memory — declarative memory, which involves memorizing facts or events, and procedural memory, which enables us to remember how to do something like writing or playing an...
Traumatic Memory01:20

Traumatic Memory

Emotionally traumatic events often lead to memories that are exceptionally vivid and enduring, sometimes persisting with remarkable clarity throughout an individual's life. A classic example of this phenomenon is a person who survives a car accident. Even years later, they may recall every detail of the event with startling accuracy — the screeching of the tires, the jarring impact, and the acrid smell of burning rubber. Such vividness contrasts sharply with how an individual remembers mundane...
Role of Neurotransmitters in Memory01:23

Role of Neurotransmitters in Memory

Neurotransmitters are integral to the brain's communication system, enabling neurons to transmit signals across synapses. This chemical exchange underpins various cognitive functions, including memory processes. The role of neurotransmitters in memory is multifaceted, influencing the encoding, consolidation, and retrieval of memories through their action on different neural circuits.
 Glutamate and Synaptic Plasticity
Glutamate, the brain's main excitatory neurotransmitter, is critical for...
Understanding Memory01:19

Understanding Memory

Memory is the retention of information or experiences over time, facilitated through three main processes: encoding, storage, and retrieval. Encoding is the process of inputting information into the memory system. For instance, when listening to a lecture, watching a play, reading a book, or having a conversation, the brain is actively encoding information. This initial stage involves transforming sensory input into a form that can be processed and stored by the brain. Various factors, such as...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 20, 2026

Assessment of Memory Function in Pilocarpine-induced Epileptic Mice
13:34

Assessment of Memory Function in Pilocarpine-induced Epileptic Mice

Published on: June 4, 2020

Does the hippocampus mediate objective binding or subjective remembering?

Scott D Slotnick1

  • 1Department of Psychology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA. sd.slotnick@bc.edu

Neuroimage
|September 30, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The hippocampus binds contextual information, not subjective remembering. Parietal cortex activity, however, is linked to remembering, suggesting distinct roles in memory retrieval.

More Related Videos

Brain Imaging Investigation of the Memory-Enhancing Effect of Emotion
15:57

Brain Imaging Investigation of the Memory-Enhancing Effect of Emotion

Published on: May 4, 2011

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jun 20, 2026

Assessment of Memory Function in Pilocarpine-induced Epileptic Mice
13:34

Assessment of Memory Function in Pilocarpine-induced Epileptic Mice

Published on: June 4, 2020

Brain Imaging Investigation of the Memory-Enhancing Effect of Emotion
15:57

Brain Imaging Investigation of the Memory-Enhancing Effect of Emotion

Published on: May 4, 2011

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroimaging

Background:

  • Human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies suggest the hippocampus is involved in context memory and "remember" responses.
  • Previous research has conflated context memory with remembering and item memory with knowing.
  • This study independently investigates the hippocampus's role in binding versus subjective remembering.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To differentiate the roles of the hippocampus in context memory (binding) versus subjective remembering using fMRI.
  • To test the binding hypothesis and the remembering hypothesis of hippocampal function.
  • To identify brain regions associated with context memory, item memory, remembering, and knowing.

Main Methods:

  • Participants underwent fMRI while encoding abstract shapes with color information.
  • At retrieval, participants identified shapes and indicated "remember" or "know" responses.
  • Activity in hippocampal regions-of-interest (ROIs) was analyzed in relation to memory conditions.

Main Results:

  • Hippocampal activity was greater for context memory than item memory, supporting the binding hypothesis.
  • A significant interaction showed greater activity for context-knowing than item-remembering in hippocampal ROIs.
  • No hippocampal activity pattern supported the remembering hypothesis; left inferior parietal cortex showed remembering-specific activity.

Conclusions:

  • The hippocampus mediates binding of item-in-context information, not subjective remembering.
  • The left inferior parietal cortex is associated with the subjective experience of remembering.
  • These findings suggest a functional dissociation between the hippocampus and parietal cortex in memory processing.