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Brain Imaging Investigation of the Memory-Enhancing Effect of Emotion
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Separate Memory-Enhancing Effects of Reward and Strategic Encoding.

Michael S Cohen1, Larry Y Cheng1, Ken A Paller1

  • 1Northwestern University.

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This summary is machine-generated.

Memory can be improved by both reward anticipation and intentional strategies, which rely on distinct neural mechanisms. This study used fMRI to show these reward-driven and strategic memory enhancement processes are separable.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroimaging

Background:

  • Memory encoding for important information is enhanced by reward anticipation and intentional strategies.
  • These effects are hypothesized to depend on distinct neural mechanisms, but evidence for separability is limited.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To determine if reward-driven and strategic mechanisms for prioritizing important information are separable.
  • To examine the joint operation of these mechanisms using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).

Main Methods:

  • Participants learned abstract visual images in a value-directed recognition paradigm.
  • fMRI measured brain activity during encoding of high-value and low-value images.
  • Psychophysiological interaction analysis assessed functional connectivity.

Main Results:

  • Successful memory encoding, especially for high-value images, showed increased activity in dorsal frontoparietal and lateral occipitotemporal cortex.
  • Reward-related network activity was higher during encoding for subsequently remembered images (regardless of value).
  • Strategic prioritization of high-value images modulated activity in dorsal posterior parietal cortex and its connectivity with lateral temporal cortex.

Conclusions:

  • Memory strengthening involves separate neurocognitive mechanisms for strategic control and reward-based enhancement.
  • Distinct brain regions and functional connectivity patterns support these separable memory processes.