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Related Experiment Videos

Preserved recall versus impaired recognition. A case study.

J Delbecq-Derouesné1, M F Beauvois, T Shallice

  • 1Groupe de Recherches en Neuropsychologie, Hôpital de la Salpêtrière, Paris, France.

Brain : a Journal of Neurology
|August 1, 1990
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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This study reports a unique case of memory impairment after surgery for an anterior communicating artery aneurysm. The patient showed impaired recognition but normal recall, a pattern reversing typical memory deficits.

Area of Science:

  • Neuropsychology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Neurology

Background:

  • Investigates memory function following surgical intervention for anterior communicating artery aneurysms.
  • Focuses on a rare case with distinct patterns of memory impairment.
  • Examines the long-term cognitive sequelae of neurosurgery.

Observation:

  • A patient, 8 years post-operation for an anterior communicating artery aneurysm, presented with significant memory deficits.
  • Neuropsychological testing revealed profound deficits in recognition memory, comparable to classical amnesic patients.
  • Remarkably, the patient demonstrated normal performance in recall tasks and ability to learn new information.

Findings:

  • The patient exhibited a unique dissociation in memory performance: severely impaired recognition alongside intact recall.

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  • This pattern is the inverse of that seen in healthy individuals and amnesic patients.
  • The patient successfully learned and relearned complex tasks, even after a delay, indicating preserved learning abilities.
  • Implications:

    • Suggests that memory performance is not solely dependent on retrieval but involves an interaction between knowledge and the subjective experience of remembering.
    • Highlights the complexity of memory systems and the potential for selective impairment after brain injury or surgery.
    • Challenges existing models of memory by presenting a novel pattern of dissociation between recognition and recall.