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Intermediate Levels of Hippocampal Activity Appear Optimal for Associative Memory Formation

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  • Xiao Liu
  • Shaozheng Qin
  • Mark Rijpkema
  • Jing Luo
  • Guillén Fernández

Abstract

Background: It is well established that hippocampal activity is positively related to effective associative memory formation. However, in biological systems often optimal levels of activity are contrasted by both sub- and supra-optimal levels. Sub-optimal levels of hippocampal activity are commonly attributed to unsuccessful memory formation, whereas the supra-optimal levels of hippocampal activity related to unsuccessful memory formation have been rarely studied. It is still unclear under what circumstances such supra-optimal levels of hippocampal activity occur. To clarify this issue, we aimed at creating a condition, in which supra-optimal hippocampal activity is associated with encoding failure. We assumed that such supra-optimal activity occurs when task-relevant information is embedded in task-irrelevant, distracting information, which can be considered as noise. Methodology/Principal Findings: In the present fMRI study, we probed neural correlates of associative memory formation in a full-factorial design with associative memory (subsequently remembered versus forgotten) and noise (induced by high versus low distraction) as factors. Results showed that encoding failure was associated with supra-optimal activity in the high-distraction condition and with sub-optimal activity in the low distraction condition. Thus, we revealed evidence for a bell-shape function relating hippocampal activity with associative encoding success. Conclusions/Significance: Our findings indicate that intermediate levels of hippocampal activity are optimal while both too low and too high levels appear detrimental for associative memory formation. Supra-optimal levels of hippocampal activity seem to occur when task-irrelevant information is added to task-relevant signal. If such task-irrelevant noise is reduced adequately, hippocampal activity is lower and thus optimal for associative memory formation.

Suggested Citation

  • Xiao Liu & Shaozheng Qin & Mark Rijpkema & Jing Luo & Guillén Fernández, 2010. "Intermediate Levels of Hippocampal Activity Appear Optimal for Associative Memory Formation," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 5(10), pages 1-9, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0013147
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013147
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