Brain. 1995 Oct;118 ( Pt 5):1129-48

Double dissociation of memory capacities after bilateral occipital-lobe or medial temporal-lobe lesions

Keane MM, Gabrieli JD, Mapstone HC, Johnson KA, Corkin S.

Abstract

Memory for recently encountered information can be reflected in conscious recall and recognition of that material, or in facilitated reprocessing of that material, an effect known as repetition priming. Repetition priming may be perceptual (form-based) or conceptual (meaning-based). A patient with bilateral occipital-lobe lesions (L.H.) and a patient with bilateral medial-temporal lobe lesions (H.M.) showed a double dissociation between visuoperceptual priming (impaired in L.H. and intact in H.M.) and visual recognition memory (intact in L.H. and impaired in H.M.). L.H. showed intact conceptual priming for visually presented words; his pattern of impaired visuoperceptual priming and intact conceptual priming is the reverse dissociation to that observed in prior studies of patients with Alzheimer's disease, in whom occipital cortices are relatively spared. These double dissociations suggest that a memory system localized to the occipital lobe mediates visuoperceptual priming effects, and that this system is independent of neural circuits mediating conceptual priming effects, and independent of the limbic-diencephalic system supporting conscious recognition of recently encountered information.

PMID: 7496775