2010
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1014391107
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Role of the hippocampus in remembering the past and imagining the future

Abstract: It has been proposed that a core network of brain regions, including the hippocampus, supports both past remembering and future imagining. We investigated the importance of the hippocampus for these functions. Five patients with bilateral hippocampal damage and one patient with large medial temporal lobe lesions were tested for their ability to recount autobiographical episodes from the remote past, the recent past, and to imagine plausible episodes in the near future. The patients with hippocampal damage had … Show more

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Cited by 191 publications
(200 citation statements)
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“…Our results have important implications for the debate on whether hippocampal damage disrupts the ability to imagine the future (9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)17). It is possible that with a damaged hippocampus, the ability to construct detailed scenarios may remain intact, whereas encoding of these representations is disrupted.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Our results have important implications for the debate on whether hippocampal damage disrupts the ability to imagine the future (9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)17). It is possible that with a damaged hippocampus, the ability to construct detailed scenarios may remain intact, whereas encoding of these representations is disrupted.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…It is possible that with a damaged hippocampus, the ability to construct detailed scenarios may remain intact, whereas encoding of these representations is disrupted. This appears to be the case both for the children with hippocampal damage who were less accurate in later recalling their imagined events (14) and for the patients with hippocampal damage whose imagined events were described as repetitive, as if they could not recall the portions of the event that they had already constructed (15). Depending on the nature and location of damage-whether it is confined to the anterior/posterior regions identified here, whether it affects the entire hippocampus, and whether it is confined to the hippocampus or also affects other neighboring regions-differential impairments may be seen in tasks that require the generation of imagined episodic details, the encoding of imagined events, or both.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Information related to recent eating is encoded in memory and influences future food intake (e.g., [54,55,58]). The hippocampus encodes information relative not only to past events but also to future ones [153]. The amygdala is involved in representing future positive events [146].…”
Section: Outstanding Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, the coherence and complexity of reported memory content-often employed as an index of episodicity (e.g., Anderson, 2012;Hurley, Maguire, & Vargha-Khadem, 2011;Race et al, 2011;Squire et al, 2010; for a discussion and critique see Arnold et al, 2011)-has neither rational nor empirical justification. While relearned personal histories (e.g., "So, what is episodic memory?")…”
Section: The Causal Foundation Of Fmtt: An Argument For Autonoesismentioning
confidence: 99%