What Happens In The Brain When
We Remember Our Own Past?
Researchers are using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
to probe brain activity in search of the answer. According to
a new fMRI study using a "diary" method to collect memories,
it all depends on what we're thinking about!
Researchers have known for decades that thinking about autobiographical
facts is different from thinking about autobiographical episodes
that happened only once. Since both kinds of thoughts can occur
at the same time when people talk about their past, researchers
have struggled to find an effective way to separate them.
The new study, published in the current issue of the Journal
of Cognitive Neuroscience (16:9), is the first brain imaging study
of its kind to use diary-like memories collected by volunteers.
It was led by The Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Centre
for Geriatric Care.
Over a period of several months prior to the brain scan, volunteers
documented dozens of unique events from their personal lives on
a micro cassette recorder (episodic memories). At the same time,
they recorded statements about personal facts of their lives (semantic
memories). The researchers played these recordings back to the
volunteers while their brains were being scanned with fMRI.
The results showed that the two types of autobiographical memory
engaged different parts of the brain, even when the memories concerned
the same contents. For example, the semantic thought "Every
Friday afternoon I take the dog for a long walk" produced
brain activity in one set of regions, whereas the episodic thought
"One Friday afternoon my dog got away and I spent 45 minutes
running after him" produced brain activity in a different
set of regions.
"Although both kinds of memory are autobiographical, they
serve very different purposes," says lead investigator Dr.
Brian Levine, a senior scientist with The Rotman Research Institute
at Baycrest and associate professor in Psychology and Neurology,
University of Toronto. "Factual autobiographical memory grounds
us in time and gives continuity to our lives. Episodic autobiographical
memory allows us to travel in time, to relive our past."
The ability to richly re-experience autobiographical memory is
thought to be unique to humans and is important for advanced decision-making
and quality of life. Dr. Levine and his team found that this form
of memory more strongly engaged parts of the frontal lobes involved
in self-awareness, as well as areas involved in visual memory.
It's important to note that losing this ability to recall personal
episodic memories as a result of serious brain injury can be tremendously
devastating to an individual and their family. Even if the individual
is able to retain autobiographical facts about their life, it
is not the same as being able to recall and re-live personal episodes
from their past, such as their wedding day.
A few brain imaging studies have already found differences in
the brain between factual and episodic autobiographical memory.
However, the participants in those studies were asked to recollect
memories that were usually several years old, and it was impossible
to tell how often they had been rehearsed over the years. This
new study, on the other hand, used episodes from daily life that
were only a few months old. The volunteers made dozens of event
recordings within minutes or hours of the actual event. Only a
fraction of these were selected at random for use in the study,
so volunteers had no idea which ones they were until they heard
them through the headphones in the scanner. The recordings created
a very rich recollective experience, enabling scientists to tease
out more easily the different brain regions associated with factual
(semantic) and episodic autobiographical memories.
One problem researchers had was finding people willing to make
the diary recordings over a six-to-eight month period. The scientists
ended up using five intrepid volunteers drawn from research institute
staff who were interested in memory research. Although the number
of volunteers is small for this sort of study, the findings were
robust and have been replicated in a larger sample.
"I got the idea for doing this one day when I came across
a letter I had written about an event that I hadn't thought of
since it happened," recalls Dr. Levine. "I felt like
my brain was suddenly flooded with memory. At the time I was looking
for ways to get at this feeling in the scanner. We needed a way
to do it right on the spot, when the memory happened. That's where
the idea of the recorders came in. I looked into it and found
that a few memory researchers over the years had done this sort
of diary study, but all of them used behavioral tests like reaction
time and the like. No one had ever done a brain imaging study."
The study was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health
Research. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care is an academic health
sciences centre affiliated with the University of Toronto.
Source: Baycrest Center For Geriatric Care
Reference
Source 125
November 25, 2004
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