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Experience-Dependent Eye Movements, Awareness, and Hippocampus-Dependent Memory Christine N. Smith, Ramona O. Hopkins, and Larry R. Squire The Journal of Neuroscience Volume 26, Issue 44, November 1, Pages 11304 -11312
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Purpose: What kind of memory is operating when eye movements change as a result of experience?
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Background: Memory is composed of distinct abilities that depend on different brain systems Eye movements are signs of behavior that are measured and correlate with different types of memory Declarative vs. Implicit memory
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3 Experiments To Test: 1. If eye movements are influenced (changed) by experience memory 2. If eye movements reflect either conscious or unconscious awareness 3. If this type of identified memory and awareness is hippocampus dependent (relies on this brain system)
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Design: Participants viewed scenes that were either: novel, repeated, or manipulated 3 blocks (each with 24 images, 5s/image) memory test for awareness E1 & E2: measured eye movements fixations & scanning of critical regions E3: tested amnesic patients ability to correctly identify novel, repeated or manipulated images measured confidence rating
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Subjects E1: 20 undergraduates; 16F, 4M E2: 20 undergraduates; 8F, 12M E3: 5 memory impaired patients; 4M, 1F (bilateral lesions to the hippocampus) & 10 volunteers (controls); 7M, 4F
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Materials: Binocular Apparatus: Head-rest viewpoint eye tracker (30hz) & PC-60 software (that detects pupillary position, measured fixations) Fixations: scored as >100ms elapsed without a saccade (eye movement of 0.7 0 within 33ms) Position was measured by a 4X4 grid that was superimposed on image following the experiment
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Results: Eye movements did differ depending on past viewing of scenes in E1 & E2, specifically simple repetitions of an image are sufficient to change behavior Findings were similar in E1 and E2, despite the differences in when awareness was assessed Impaired performance on memory task & a decrease in confidence in responses of memory impaired patients in E3
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E1: block 2
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E1: block 3
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E2: yielded similar results to E1
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E3: Performance of memory impaired patients
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Conclusions: Eye movements change as a function of experience Eye movements could not reveal unconscious forms of memory, thus eye movements reflected conscious declarative memory for what scenes were novel & repeated, and manipulated Ability to classify images correctly & confidently relies on hippocampus-dependent, declarative memory
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Bottom Line: Experience-dependent eye movements in response to altered scenes reflect conscious, declarative memory that supports the link between: Aware (conscious) Memory Declarative Memory & Hippocampus-dependent Memory
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