Rushton Lectures 2005: Preparatory Seminar
Denesa Lockwood and Tom Houpt
A list of the speakers and representative papers that will be reviewed.
Monday, 1-31-05
Discussion Questions for Lustig et al. and Johnson et al., to be reviewed on Monday 1-31-05.
C. Lustig, A. Konkel, and L.L. Jacoby. Which route to recovery? Controlled retrieval and accessibility bias in retroactive interference. Psychol. Sci. 15 (2004) 729 - 735.
M. K. Johnson et al. An age-related deficit in prefrontal cortical function associated with refreshing information. Psychol. Sci. 15 (2004) 127-132.
All the Papers
1. Howard Eichenbaum
Discussion Questions for Wood et al., reviewed on Monday, 1-10-05.
E.R. Wood et al. Hippocampal neurons encode information about different types of memory episodes occuring in the same location. Neuron 27 (2000) 623- 633.
Discussion Questions for Forlin et al., to be reviewed on Wednesday, 1-19-05.
N.J. Forlin, S.P. Wright, and H. Eichenbaum. Recollection-like memory retrieval in rats is dependent on the hippocampus. Nature 431 (2004) 188-191.
Supplemental:
Yonelinas, A.P. Components of episodic memory: the contribution of recollection and familiarity. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2001 Sep 29;356(1413):1363-74.
2. Larry Jacoby
Discussion Questions for Velanova et al., reviewed on Monday, 1-24-05.
Supplemental Links on fMRI and Brodmann's Area:
http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fmri_intro/
http://spot.colorado.edu/~dubin/talks/brodmann/brodmann.html
K. Velanova et al. Function-anatomic correlates of sustained and transient processing components engaged during controlled retrieval. J. Neurosci. 23 (2003) 8460 -8470.
Discussion Questions for Lustig et al. and Johnson et al., to be reviewed on Monday 1-31-05.
C. Lustig, A. Konkel, and L.L. Jacoby. Which route to recovery? Controlled retrieval and accessibility bias in retroactive interference. Psychol. Sci. 15 (2004) 729 - 735.
3. Marcia Johnson
M. K. Johnson et al. An age-related deficit in prefrontal cortical function associated with refreshing information. Psychol. Sci. 15 (2004) 127-132.
F. Burglen et al., Impaired Performance in a working memory binding task in patients with schizophrenia. Psychiatry Res. 125 (2004) 247-255.
4. Tracy Schors
T.J. Schors and G. Miesegaes. Testosterone in utero and at birth dictates how stressful experience will affect learning in adulthood. PNAS 99 (2002) 13955-13960.
B. Leuner et al. Learning enhances the survival of new neurons beyond the time when the hippocampus is required for memory. J. Neurosci. 24 (2004) 7477-7481.
5. Alcino J. Silva
P.W. Frankland et al. alpha-CAMKII-dependent plasticity in the cortex is required for permanent memory. Nature 411 (2001) 309-313.
P.W. Frankland et al. The involvement of the anterior cingular cortex in remote contextual fear memory. Science 304 (2004) 881-883.
6. Anthony Wagner
L. Davachi and A.D. Wagner. Hippocampal contributions to episodic encoding. Insights from relational and item-based learning. J. Neurophysiol. 88 (2002) 982-990.
I. Kahn, L. Davachi, and A.D. Wagner. Functional-neuroantomic correlates of recollection. Implications for models of recognition memory. J. Neurosci. 24 (2004) 4172-4180.
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February 23, 2009