AI Article Synopsis

  • A study compared the spatial memory abilities of 30 patients who had undergone unilateral temporal lobectomy (14 right, 16 left) with 16 control participants using a computerized version of the Morris Water Maze.
  • In the allocentric condition, participants needed to find a target based on object cues while moving around the screen, while in the egocentric condition, they stayed still while object cues were shifted, disrupting memory types.
  • Results showed that only the right temporal lobectomy group struggled with the allocentric tasks, suggesting that the right anterior temporal lobe plays a critical role in long-term allocentric spatial memory.

Article Abstract

Thirty patients who had undergone either a right or left unilateral temporal lobectomy (14 RTL; 16 LTL) and 16 control participants were tested on a computerized human analogue of the Morris Water Maze. The procedure was designed to compare allocentric and egocentric spatial memory. In the allocentric condition, participants searched for a target location on the screen, guided by object cues. Between trials, participants had to walk around the screen, which disrupted egocentric memory representation. In the egocentric condition, participants remained in the same position, but the object cues were shifted between searches to prevent them from using allocentric memory. Only the RTL group was impaired on the allocentric condition, and neither the LTL nor RTL group was impaired on additional tests of spatial working memory or spatial manipulation. The results support the notion that the right anterior temporal lobe stores long-term allocentric spatial memories.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0894-4105.18.3.462DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

egocentric spatial
8
spatial memory
8
unilateral temporal
8
temporal lobectomy
8
allocentric condition
8
condition participants
8
object cues
8
rtl group
8
group impaired
8
allocentric
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!