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      Facilitating Memory for Novel Characters by Reducing Neural Repetition Suppression in the Left Fusiform Cortex

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          Abstract

          Background

          The left midfusiform and adjacent regions have been implicated in processing and memorizing familiar words, yet its role in memorizing novel characters has not been well understood.

          Methodology/Principal Findings

          Using functional MRI, the present study examined the hypothesis that the left midfusiform is also involved in memorizing novel characters and spaced learning could enhance the memory by enhancing the left midfusiform activity during learning. Nineteen native Chinese readers were scanned while memorizing the visual form of 120 Korean characters that were novel to the subjects. Each character was repeated four times during learning. Repetition suppression was manipulated by using two different repetition schedules: massed learning and spaced learning, pseudo-randomly mixed within the same scanning session. Under the massed learning condition, the four repetitions were consecutive (with a jittered inter-repetition interval to improve the design efficiency). Under the spaced learning condition, the four repetitions were interleaved with a minimal inter-repetition lag of 6 stimuli. Spaced learning significantly improved participants' performance during the recognition memory test administered one hour after the scan. Stronger left midfusiform and inferior temporal gyrus activities during learning (summed across four repetitions) were associated with better memory of the characters, based on both within- and cross-subjects analyses. Compared to massed learning, spaced learning significantly reduced neural repetition suppression and increased the overall activities in these regions, which were associated with better memory for novel characters.

          Conclusions/Significance

          These results demonstrated a strong link between cortical activity in the left midfusiform and memory for novel characters, and thus challenge the visual word form area (VWFA) hypothesis. Our results also shed light on the neural mechanisms of the spacing effect in memorizing novel characters.

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          Most cited references55

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          Cultural recycling of cortical maps.

          Part of human cortex is specialized for cultural domains such as reading and arithmetic, whose invention is too recent to have influenced the evolution of our species. Representations of letter strings and of numbers occupy reproducible locations within large-scale macromaps, respectively in the left occipito-temporal and bilateral intraparietal cortex. Furthermore, recent fMRI studies reveal a systematic architecture within these areas. To explain this paradoxical cerebral invariance of cultural maps, we propose a neuronal recycling hypothesis, according to which cultural inventions invade evolutionarily older brain circuits and inherit many of their structural constraints.
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            The visual word form area: expertise for reading in the fusiform gyrus.

            Brain imaging studies reliably localize a region of visual cortex that is especially responsive to visual words. This brain specialization is essential to rapid reading ability because it enhances perception of words by becoming specifically tuned to recurring properties of a writing system. The origin of this specialization poses a challenge for evolutionary accounts involving innate mechanisms for functional brain organization. We propose an alternative account, based on studies of other forms of visual expertise (i.e. bird and car experts) that lead to functional reorganization. We argue that the interplay between the unique demands of word reading and the structural constraints of the visual system lead to the emergence of the Visual Word Form Area.
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              Building memories: remembering and forgetting of verbal experiences as predicted by brain activity.

              A fundamental question about human memory is why some experiences are remembered whereas others are forgotten. Brain activation during word encoding was measured using blocked and event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine how neural activation differs for subsequently remembered and subsequently forgotten experiences. Results revealed that the ability to later remember a verbal experience is predicted by the magnitude of activation in left prefrontal and temporal cortices during that experience. These findings provide direct evidence that left prefrontal and temporal regions jointly promote memory formation for verbalizable events.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS One
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2010
                6 October 2010
                : 5
                : 10
                : e13204
                Affiliations
                [1 ]State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China
                [2 ]Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America
                [3 ]Department of Psychology and Social Behavior, University of California Irvine, Irvine, California, United States of America
                [4 ]Imaging Research Center and Departments of Psychology and Neurobiology, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, United States of America
                National Institute of Mental Health, United States of America
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: GX CC ZLL RAP QD. Performed the experiments: LM. Analyzed the data: GX. Wrote the paper: GX CC ZLL RAP QD.

                Article
                10-PONE-RA-21308R2
                10.1371/journal.pone.0013204
                2950859
                20949093
                d3f9d0e0-4278-4569-baff-ad94e2faea5c
                Xue et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 19 July 2010
                : 7 September 2010
                Page count
                Pages: 10
                Categories
                Research Article
                Neuroscience/Cognitive Neuroscience
                Neuroscience/Psychology
                Neuroscience/Experimental Psychology

                Uncategorized
                Uncategorized

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