2018
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.24467
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Gradual acquisition of visuospatial associative memory representations via the dorsal precuneus

Abstract: Activation of parietal cortex structures like the precuneus is commonly observed during explicit memory retrieval, but the role of parietal cortices in encoding has only recently been appreciated and is still poorly understood. Considering the importance of the precuneus in human visual attention and imagery, we aimed to assess a potential role for the precuneus in the encoding of visuospatial representations into long-term memory. We therefore investigated the acquisition of constant versus repeatedly shuffle… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…In humans, the medial superior parietal cortex pinpointed here as mediator of recalibration, in particular the precuneus, has been implied in maintaining spatial and episodic memory (3840,52,53) used for example during navigation, spatial updating or spatial search (53,54). Our results broaden the functional scope of these parietal regions in multisensory perception, by showing that these regions are also involved in the integration of multiple simultaneous cues to guide subsequent spatial behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In humans, the medial superior parietal cortex pinpointed here as mediator of recalibration, in particular the precuneus, has been implied in maintaining spatial and episodic memory (3840,52,53) used for example during navigation, spatial updating or spatial search (53,54). Our results broaden the functional scope of these parietal regions in multisensory perception, by showing that these regions are also involved in the integration of multiple simultaneous cues to guide subsequent spatial behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As already pointed out in Section 1, the medial parietal cortex has recently been found to likely complement the hippocampus in the establishment of memory representations, as it is sensitive to repetitions but suppressed during initial encoding of novel information (Brodt et al, ; Brodt et al, ; Gilmore et al, ; Schott et al, ). We did not find that the activity in the parietal cortex could be explained by the number of repetitions preceding the deviants, suggesting that the activity we see here is not merely a reflection of this reinstatement‐dependent behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Entirely different features of aberrant connectivity in PD were uncovered when retrieving a target encoded in the face of distraction. Here, connectivity disturbances were specific to the bilateral precuneus, which together with other parietal‐occipital regions represent the precision by which items are remembered (Christophel et al, ; Galeano Weber et al, ; Schott et al, ; Wang, Itthipuripat, & Ku, ). Precuneus coupling was strengthened with prefrontal regions (BA 10) that control top‐down attention (Simons, Gilbert, Owen, Fletcher, & Burgess, ) and a memory recollection network (posterior cingulate, PHC) (Jonker, Dimsdale‐Zucker, Ritchey, Clarke, & Ranganath, ; Ranganath & Ritchey, ; Thakral, Wang, & Rugg, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Entirely different features of aberrant connectivity in PD were uncovered when retrieving a target encoded in the face of distraction. Here, connectivity disturbances were specific to the bilateral precuneus, which together with other parietal-occipital regions represent the precision by which items are remembered (Christophel et al, 2015;Galeano Weber et al, 2017;Schott et al, 2019;Wang, Itthipuripat, & Ku, 2019).…”
Section: Abnormal Distraction-dependent Connectivitymentioning
confidence: 97%
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