Statements in which the resource exists as a subject.
PredicateObject
rdf:type
lifeskim:mentions
pubmed:issue
3
pubmed:dateCreated
2000-8-1
pubmed:abstractText
Case studies of patients with bilateral amygdala damage and functional imaging studies of normal individuals have demonstrated that the amygdala plays a critical role in encoding emotionally arousing stimuli into long-term declarative memory. However, several issues remain poorly understood: the separate roles of left and right amygdala, the time course over which the amygdala participates in memory consolidation, and the type of knowledge structures it helps consolidate. We investigated these questions in eight subjects with unilateral amygdala damage, using several different measures. For comparison, our main task used stimuli identical to those used previously to investigate emotional declarative memory in patients with bilateral amygdala damage. Contrasts with both brain-damaged and normal control groups showed that subjects with left amygdala damage were impaired in their memory for emotional stimuli, despite entirely normal memory for neutral stimuli (because of a number of caveats, the findings from subjects with right amygdala damage were less clear). Follow-up experiments suggested that the normal facilitation of memory for emotional stimuli may develop over an extended time course (>30 min), consistent with prior findings, and that the specific impairment we report may depend in part on the lexical nature of the task used (written questionnaire). We stress the complex and temporally extended nature of memory consolidation and suggest that the amygdala may influence specific components of this process.
pubmed:commentsCorrections
http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-10082635, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-10456070, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-10500230, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-10634773, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-1532823, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-7566084, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-7935815, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-8078906, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-8750416, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-8755595, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-8774879, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-8942964, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9038281, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9339304, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9352521, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9522399, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9619995, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9624001, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9683321, http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/pubmed/commentcorrection/10837507-9740761
pubmed:language
eng
pubmed:journal
pubmed:citationSubset
IM
pubmed:status
MEDLINE
pubmed:issn
1072-0502
pubmed:author
pubmed:issnType
Print
pubmed:volume
7
pubmed:owner
NLM
pubmed:authorsComplete
Y
pubmed:pagination
180-6
pubmed:dateRevised
2009-11-18
pubmed:meshHeading
pubmed:articleTitle
Impaired emotional declarative memory following unilateral amygdala damage.
pubmed:affiliation
Department of Neurology, Division of Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA. ralph-adolphs@uiowa.edu
pubmed:publicationType
Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't