Patients with hippocampal amnesia cannot imagine new experiences
TL;DR: It is revealed that patients with primary damage to the hippocampus bilaterally could construct new imagined experiences in response to short verbal cues that outlined a range of simple commonplace scenarios, but were markedly impaired relative to matched control subjects at imagining new experiences.
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Abstract: Amnesic patients have a well established deficit in remembering their past experiences. Surprisingly, however, the question as to whether such patients can imagine new experiences has not been formally addressed to our knowledge. We tested whether a group of amnesic patients with primary damage to the hippocampus bilaterally could construct new imagined experiences in response to short verbal cues that outlined a range of simple commonplace scenarios. Our results revealed that patients were markedly impaired relative to matched control subjects at imagining new experiences. Moreover, we identified a possible source for this deficit. The patients' imagined experiences lacked spatial coherence, consisting instead of fragmented images in the absence of a holistic representation of the environmental setting. The hippocampus, therefore, may make a critical contribution to the creation of new experiences by providing the spatial context into which the disparate elements of an experience can be bound. Given how closely imagined experiences match episodic memories, the absence of this function mediated by the hippocampus, may also fundamentally affect the ability to vividly re-experience the past.
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Self-related processing and future thinking: Distinct contributions of ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the medial temporal lobes.
TL;DR: Findings accord with evidence from neuroimaging studies and elucidate the distinct contributions of vmPFC and MTL to future thinking and show patients with MTL lesions showed a self-benefit, despite impoverished performance overall.
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Development of Episodic Prospection: Factors Underlying Improvements in Middle and Late Childhood.
TL;DR: Age-related differences in episodic prospection in 5- to 11-year-olds and adults and factors that may contribute to developmental improvements were examined, suggesting future event generation is particularly difficult for children.
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TL;DR: The main characteristics of the coding in the MTL by the so-called concept cells are described and a model of the formation and recall of episodic memory based on partially overlapping assemblies is proposed.
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Dreaming with hippocampal damage
Goffredina Spanò,Gloria Pizzamiglio,Cornelia McCormick,Ian A. Clark,Sara De Felice,Thomas D. Miller,Jamie O. Edgin,Clive R. Rosenthal,Eleanor A. Maguire +8 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that hippocampal integrity may be necessary for typical dreaming to occur, and aligns dreaming with other hippocampal-dependent processes such as episodic memory that are central to supporting the authors' mental life.
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Imagination as a fundamental function of the hippocampus
TL;DR: In this article , the authors suggest that a fundamental function of the hippocampus is to generate a wealth of hypothetical experiences and thoughts, and that traditional accounts of hippocampal function in episodic memory and spatial navigation can be understood as particular applications of a more general system for imagination.
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