King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, University Department of Neuropsychiatry, Adamson Centre, South Wing, St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth Palace Road, London, SE1 7EH, UK.
Neuropsychologia. 2012 Nov;50(13):2961-72. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.07.028. Epub 2012 Aug 2.
Andrew Mayes's contribution to the neuropsychology of memory has consisted in steadily teasing out the nature of the memory deficit in the amnesic syndrome. This has been done with careful attention to matters of method at all stages. This particularly applies to his investigations of forgetting rates in amnesia and to his studies of retrograde amnesia. Following a brief outline of his work, the main current theories of retrograde amnesia are considered: consolidation theory, episodic-to-semantic shift theory, and multiple trace theory. Findings across the main studies in Alzheimer dementia are reviewed to illustrate what appears to be consistently found, and what is much more inconsistent. A number of problems and issues in current theories are then highlighted--including the nature of the temporal gradient, correlations with the extent of temporal lobe damage, what we would expect 'normal' remote memory curves to look like, how they would appear in focal retrograde amnesia, and whether we can pinpoint retrograde amnesia to hippocampal/medial temporal damage on the basis of existing studies. A recent study of retrograde amnesia is re-analysed to demonstrate temporal gradients on recollected episodic memories in hippocampal/medial temporal patients. It is concluded that there are two requirements for better understanding of the nature of retrograde amnesia: (i) a tighter, Mayesian attention to method in terms of both the neuropsychology and neuroimaging in investigations of retrograde amnesia; and (ii) acknowledging that there may be multiple factors underlying a temporal gradient, and that episodic and semantic memory show important interdependencies at both encoding and retrieval. Such factors may be critical to understanding what is remembered and what is forgotten from our autobiographical pasts.
安德鲁·梅斯(Andrew Mayes)在记忆的神经心理学方面的贡献在于,他一直在稳步深入研究遗忘症患者的记忆缺陷的本质。他在所有阶段都非常注意方法问题。这尤其适用于他对遗忘症遗忘率的调查以及他对逆行性遗忘的研究。在简要概述他的工作之后,考虑了逆行性遗忘的主要当前理论:巩固理论、情节到语义转换理论和多重痕迹理论。回顾了主要阿尔茨海默病研究中的发现,以说明始终发现的内容以及更不一致的内容。然后突出了当前理论中的一些问题和问题,包括时间梯度的性质、与颞叶损伤程度的相关性、我们期望“正常”远程记忆曲线的样子、它们在局灶性逆行性遗忘中出现的样子,以及我们是否可以根据现有研究将逆行性遗忘症归因于海马/内侧颞叶损伤。重新分析了一项逆行性遗忘症的最新研究,以证明海马/内侧颞叶患者的回忆性情节记忆中的时间梯度。结论是,要更好地理解逆行性遗忘症的本质,有两个要求:(i)在逆行性遗忘症的神经心理学和神经影像学研究中,更紧密、更具梅耶斯风格的方法关注;(ii)承认可能有多种因素导致时间梯度,情节记忆和语义记忆在编码和检索时都表现出重要的相互依赖性。这些因素可能对于理解我们自传过去中记住和遗忘的内容至关重要。