Top-down signal from prefrontal cortex in executive control of memory retrieval
Hyoe Tomita (),
Machiko Ohbayashi,
Kiyoshi Nakahara,
Isao Hasegawa and
Yasushi Miyashita ()
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Hyoe Tomita: The University of Tokyo, School of Medicine
Machiko Ohbayashi: The University of Tokyo, School of Medicine
Kiyoshi Nakahara: Mind Articulation Project, ICORP, Japan Science and Technology Corporation
Isao Hasegawa: The University of Tokyo, School of Medicine
Yasushi Miyashita: The University of Tokyo, School of Medicine
Nature, 1999, vol. 401, issue 6754, 699-703
Abstract:
Abstract Knowledge or experience is voluntarily recalled from memory by reactivation of the neural representations in the cerebral association cortex1,2,3,4. In inferior temporal cortex, which serves as the storehouse of visual long-term memory5,6,7,8, activation of mnemonic engrams through electric stimulation results in imagery recall in humans9, and neurons can be dynamically activated by the necessity for memory recall in monkeys10,11. Neuropsychological studies12 and previous split-brain experiments13 predicted that prefrontal cortex exerts executive control upon inferior temporal cortex in memory retrieval; however, no neuronal correlate of this process has ever been detected. Here we show evidence of the top-down signal from prefrontal cortex. In the absence of bottom-up visual inputs, single inferior temporal neurons were activated by the top-down signal, which conveyed information on semantic categorization imposed by visual stimulus–stimulus association. Behavioural performance was severely impaired with loss of the top-down signal. Control experiments confirmed that the signal was transmitted not through a subcortical but through a fronto-temporal cortical pathway. Thus, feedback projections from prefrontal cortex to the posterior association cortex2,3,14 appear to serve the executive control of voluntary recall.
Date: 1999
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DOI: 10.1038/44372
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