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Elaboration Benefits Source Memory Encoding Through Centrality Change.


ABSTRACT: Variations in levels of processing affect memory encoding and subsequent retrieval performance, but it is unknown how processing depth affects communication patterns within the network of interconnected brain regions involved in episodic memory encoding. In 113 healthy adults scanned with functional MRI, we used graph theory to calculate centrality indices representing the brain regions' relative importance in the memory network. We tested how communication patterns in 42 brain regions involved in episodic memory encoding changed as a function of processing depth, and how these changes were related to episodic memory ability. Centrality changes in right middle frontal gyrus, right inferior parietal lobule and left superior frontal gyrus were positively related to semantic elaboration during encoding. In the same regions, centrality during successful episodic memory encoding was related to performance on the episodic memory task, indicating that these centrality changes reflect processes that support memory encoding through deep elaborative processing. Similar analyses were performed for congruent trials, i.e. events that fit into existing knowledge structures, but no relationship between centrality changes and congruity were found. The results demonstrate that while elaboration and congruity have similar beneficial effects on source memory performance, the cortical signatures of these processes are probably not identical.

SUBMITTER: Amlien IK 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6403239 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Elaboration Benefits Source Memory Encoding Through Centrality Change.

Amlien Inge K IK   Sneve Markus H MH   Vidal-Piñeiro Didac D   Walhovd Kristine B KB   Fjell Anders M AM  

Scientific reports 20190306 1


Variations in levels of processing affect memory encoding and subsequent retrieval performance, but it is unknown how processing depth affects communication patterns within the network of interconnected brain regions involved in episodic memory encoding. In 113 healthy adults scanned with functional MRI, we used graph theory to calculate centrality indices representing the brain regions' relative importance in the memory network. We tested how communication patterns in 42 brain regions involved  ...[more]

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