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Nat. Rev. Neurosci. · Jul 2010
ReviewA model for memory systems based on processing modes rather than consciousness.
- Katharina Henke.
- University of Bern, Muesmattstrasse 45,3000 Bern 9, Switzerland. henke@psy.unibe.ch
- Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2010 Jul 1;11(7):523-32.
AbstractProminent models of human long-term memory distinguish between memory systems on the basis of whether learning and retrieval occur consciously or unconsciously. Episodic memory formation requires the rapid encoding of associations between different aspects of an event which, according to these models, depends on the hippocampus and on consciousness. However, recent evidence indicates that the hippocampus mediates rapid associative learning with and without consciousness in humans and animals, for long-term and short-term retention. Consciousness seems to be a poor criterion for differentiating between declarative (or explicit) and non declarative (or implicit) types of memory. A new model is therefore required in which memory systems are distinguished based on the processing operations involved rather than by consciousness.
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