WASHINGTON - By tracking patterns of eye movements, scientists can now get information about stored memories even when a person is unable or unwilling to report what they remember.
A new study has offered compelling insight into the relationship between activity in the hippocampus, eye movements, and both conscious and unconscious memory.
The hippocampus is a brain region that is critical for conscious recollection of past events but the precise role of this area in memory remains controversial.
According to one theory, even if explicit retrieval fails, the hippocampus might still support expressions of relational memory (e.g., memory for the co-occurrence of items in the context of some scene or event) when sensitive, indirect testing methods are used.
To test the above theory, Drs. Deborah Hannula and Charan Ranganath, both from the Center for Neuroscience at the University of California, Davis, used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine participants’ brain activity while they attempted to remember previously studied face-scene pairings.
During scanning, participants were shown a previously studied scene along with three previously studied faces and were asked to identify the face that had been paired with that scene earlier.
Eye movements were also monitored during the task and provided an indirect measure of memory.
The researchers observed that during each test trial, participants frequently spent more time viewing the face that had been previously paired with the scene-an eye-movement-based memory effect.
Surprisingly, the hippocampal activity was closely tied to participants’ tendency to view the associated face, even when they failed to identify it.
They found that the activity in the prefrontal cortex, an area required for decision making, was sensitive to whether or not participants had responded correctly and communication between the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus was increased during correct, but not incorrect, trials.
The findings may shed light on the role of the hippocampus in memory and awareness, as they suggest that even when people fail to recollect a past event, the hippocampus might still support an expression of memory through eye movements.
In addition, the results suggest that even when the hippocampus is doing its job, conscious memory may depend on interactions between the hippocampus and the prefrontal cortex.
One implication of the results is that eye movements might be used to indirectly assess memory and hippocampal function in cognitively impaired patients, children, or others who might have difficulty with conventional memory tests.
These measures might also track memory in uncooperative individuals.
“It is conceivable that eye-tracking could be used to obtain information about past events from participants who are unaware or attempting to withhold information. In other words, there may be circumstances in which eye movements provide a more robust account of past events or experiences than behavioural reports alone,” said Hannula.
The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal Neuron. (ANI)
Related News
How illusions of magician's vanishing acts occurSeptember 28th, 2009 LONDON - Scottish scientists have thrown light on what helps some magicians perform disappearing acts, revealing that illusions occur when blind spots prevent the eyes from seeing changes before them. Experts at Edinburgh University say that spectators lose their sight for just a few milliseconds when their eyes make tiny shifts in focus, which is too short for them to notice but long enough to miss changes in visual scenes.
Shut your eyes, let the music scare you moreSeptember 16th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Scary music sounds more scary with eyes shut, a new study has found. The simple act of voluntarily closing one's eyes instead of listening to music and sounds in the dark can elicit more intense physical responses in the brain itself, said Talma Hendler, neuroscience professor at Tel Aviv University (TAU).
8yr-old Bronx girl survives fall from window 7 flights upAugust 21st, 2009 WASHINGTON - An 8-year-old Bronx girl miraculously escaped death after falling out of a window 7 flights up. The little girl, named Destiny, landed on a patch a grass in front of the housing project where she lives, just inches away from a paved roadway, reports Fox News.
Window design can cut indoor electricity needs by 99pc in TropicsAugust 1st, 2009 WASHINGTON - Improved window designs and positioning that could let in more light can cut indoor lighting needs by up to 99pct in Tropical regions, say researchers. In Tropical regions daylighting leads to a significant rise in temperature, which has to be countered by air-conditioning if the occupants are to remain cool and comfortable.
Scary music sounds spookier with eyes shutJuly 29th, 2009 LONDON - Closing your eyes while listening to scary music makes it scarier, say researchers. A group of neuroscientists claim to have discovered that a brain centre involved in sensing emotion and fear called the amygdala kicks into action when volunteers listen to scary music with eyes closed, reports New Scientist.
Scientists achieve breakthrough in quantum control of lightMay 31st, 2009 WASHINGTON - Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have demonstrated a breakthrough in the quantum control of photons, the energy quanta of light, which is a significant result in quantum computation, and could eventually have implications in banking, drug design, and other applications. UCSB physics researchers Max Hofheinz, John Martinis, and Andrew Cleland used a superconducting electronic circuit known as a Josephson phase qubit to prepare highly unusual quantum states using microwave-frequency photons.
Short-term memories 'don't fade away gradually'April 30th, 2009 WASHINGTON - For many years, scientists have held that short-term memories don't suddenly disappear, but grow gradually more imprecise over the course of several seconds. However, a new study has found just the opposite.
Novel compound can treat addiction by shutting drug-related memoriesApril 24th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Scientists have found that a novel compound could treat addiction by warding off memories linked with the time of prior drug use. Despite being abstinent for long periods of time, many addicts remain vulnerable to their own memories of drug use in the past.
Vivica A. Fox doesn't have eyes for Zac EfronApril 23rd, 2009 WASHINGTON - Vivica A. Fox has slammed reports claiming that she is eyeing Hollywood heartthrob Zac Efron.
Our eyes seek new targets while searching for somethingApril 15th, 2009 WASHINGTON - People's attention does not return time and again to the objects they have already seen while searching for something, but they tend to shift their eyes to previously fixated locations when performing other visual tasks, according to a study. Psychologists Michael D.
Like humans, birds too can interpret looks and gesturesApril 3rd, 2009 WASHINGTON - Think birds are just some "high-flying, cute looking" species? Well, it's time you jiggle your thinking and respect their mental abilities, for a new study has found that jackdaws can interpret looks and gestures in the same way as humans. According to a study reported online on April 2nd in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, jackdaws-birds related to crows and ravens with eyes that appear similar to human eyes-can change their behaviour when someone is looking their way.
CO2 in underground water may bring carbon capture and storage a step closerApril 2nd, 2009 WASHINGTON - A new research has shown that for millions of years carbon dioxide (CO2) has been stored safely and naturally in underground water in gas fields saturated with the greenhouse gas, a finding that brings carbon capture and storage a step closer. Some models predict that CO2 would react with rock minerals to form new carbonate minerals, while others suggest that the gas dissolves into the water.
Stressful memories may soon be historyMarch 18th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Scientists have suggested a new strategy to treat the distress related to traumatic memories. Their strategy is based on the study of a drug, RU38486, which blocks the effects of the stress hormone cortisol.
I'll love Brad Pitt for rest of my life, says Jennifer AnistonMarch 12th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Jennifer Aniston has revealed that she still loves her ex-husband Brad Pitt. What's more, she hopes she and Pitt will be "good friends again" in the future.
Why do popular songs trigger specific memories?January 21st, 2009 WASHINGTON - Just thinking about a particular song can evoke vivid memories of the past or special events in your life. 'We thought that actually hearing the song would bring back the most vivid memories,' said Richard Harris, professor of psychology at Kansas State University (KSU) and co-author of the study.