1. Decreases in theta and increases in high frequency activity underlie associative memory encoding
- Author
-
John F. Burke, Michael J. Kahana, Kareem A. Zaghloul, Rafi U. Haque, and Jeffrey A. Greenberg
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Memory, Episodic ,Electroencephalography ,Intracranial Electroencephalography ,Lateralization of brain function ,Article ,Young Adult ,Encoding (memory) ,medicine ,Humans ,Theta Rhythm ,Episodic memory ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Long-term memory ,Association Learning ,Brain ,Cognition ,Content-addressable memory ,Middle Aged ,Brain Waves ,Neurology ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Episodic memory encoding refers to the cognitive process by which items and their associated contexts are stored in memory. To investigate changes directly attributed to the formation of explicit associations, we examined oscillatory power captured through intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG) as 27 neurosurgical patients receiving subdural and depth electrodes for seizure monitoring participated in a paired associates memory task. We examined low (3–8 Hz) and high (45–95 Hz) frequency activity, and found that the successful formation of new associations was accompanied by broad decreases in low frequency activity and a posterior to anterior progression of increases in high frequency activity in the left hemisphere. These data suggest that the observed patterns of activity may reflect the neural mechanisms underlying the formation of novel item-item associations.
- Published
- 2014