The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2002, 22(13):5741-5748
Medial Temporal Lobe Amnesia: Gradual Acquisition of Factual
Information by Nondeclarative Memory
Peter J.
Bayley2 and
Larry R.
Squire1, 2, 3, 4
1 Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Diego,
California 92161, Departments of 2 Psychiatry,
3 Neurosciences, and 4 Psychology, University
of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093
Most amnesic patients with damage to the medial temporal lobe
retain some capacity to learn new information about facts and events.
In many cases, the learning appears to depend on a residual ability to
acquire conscious (declarative) knowledge. We have studied the capacity
for semantic (fact) learning in the profoundly amnesic patient E.P.,
who has extensive damage limited primarily to the medial temporal lobe.
E.P. was presented with factual information (novel three-word
sentences) during 24 study sessions across 12 weeks. E.P. performed
much more poorly than controls but demonstrated unmistakable
improvement across the sessions, achieving after 12 weeks a score of
18.8% correct on a cued-recall test and 64.6% correct on a
two-alternative, forced-choice test. Unlike controls, E.P.'s learning
was not accompanied by conscious knowledge about which answers were
correct. He assigned the same confidence ratings to his correct answers
as his incorrect answers. Moreover, on the forced-choice test his
response times were identical for correct and incorrect responses.
Furthermore, unlike controls, he could not respond correctly when the
second word in each sentence was replaced by a synonym. Thus, what E.P.
learned was rigidly organized, unavailable as conscious knowledge, and
in all respects exhibited the characteristics of nondeclarative memory.
Thus, factual information, which is ordinarily learned as declarative
(conscious) knowledge and with the participation of the medial temporal
lobe, can be acquired as nondeclarative memory, albeit very gradually
and in a form that is outside of awareness and that is not represented as factual knowledge. We suggest that E.P.'s learning depended on a
process akin to perceptual learning and occurred directly within neocortex.
Key words:
memory; hippocampus; medial temporal lobe; declarative
memory; nondeclarative memory; semantic learning; amnesia; patient
E.P.
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22135741-08$05.00/0