Declarative memory formation depends on the hippocampus and declines in aging. Two functions of the hippocampus, temporal binding and relational organization (Rawlins and Tsaltas, 1983; Eichenbaum , 1992 ; Cohen , 1997 ), are known to decline in aging (Leal and Yassa, 2015). However, in the literature distinct procedures have been used to study these two functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2017
Temporal binding, the process that enables association between discontiguous stimuli in memory, and relational organization, a process that enables the flexibility of declarative memories, are both hippocampus-dependent and decline in aging. However, how these two processes are related in supporting declarative memory formation and how they are compromised in age-related memory loss remain hypothetical. We here identify a causal link between these two features of declarative memory: Temporal binding is a necessary condition for the relational organization of discontiguous events.
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