Authors
Gordon Winocur, Morris Moscovitch
Publication date
2011/9
Journal
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
Volume
17
Issue
5
Pages
766-780
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
With time and experience, memories undergo a process of reorganization that involves different neuronal networks, known as systems consolidation. The traditional view, as articulated in standard consolidation theory (SCT), is that (episodic and semantic) memories initially depend on the hippocampus, but eventually become consolidated in their original forms in other brain regions. In this study, we review the main principles of SCT and report evidence from the neuropsychological literature that would not be predicted by this theory. By comparison, the evidence supports an alternative account, the transformation hypothesis, whose central premise is that changes in neural representation in systems consolidation are accompanied by corresponding changes in the nature of the memory. According to this view, hippocampally dependent, episodic, or context-specific memories transform into semantic or gist-like …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
G Winocur, M Moscovitch - Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 2011