Although it is well established that the hippocampus is
critical for episodic memory, little is known about how the hippocampus
interacts with cortical regions during successful memory formation.
Here, we used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) to identify areas that exhibited differential functional connectivity
with the hippocampus during processing of novel objects that were
subsequently remembered or forgotten on a postscan test. Functional
connectivity with the hippocampus was enhanced during successful, as
compared with unsuccessful, memory formation, in a distributed network
of limbic cortical areas—including perirhinal, orbitofrontal, and
retrosplenial/posterior cingulate cortex—that are anatomically connected
with the hippocampal formation. Increased connectivity was also
observed in lateral temporal, medial parietal, and medial occipital cortex.
These findings demonstrate that successful memory formation is
associated with transient increases in cortico-hippocampal interaction.
Functional Connectivity with the Hippocampus During Successful Memory Formation
Authors
Ranganath C
Heller A
Cohen MX
Brozinsky CJ
Rissman J
Heller A
Cohen MX
Brozinsky CJ
Rissman J
Date
2005
PubliCATION
Hippocampus 15(8):997-1005