Distinguishable memory retrieval networks for collaboratively and non-collaboratively learned information
Publication year
2018Number of pages
10 p.
Source
Neuropsychologia, 111, (2018), pp. 123-132ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
PI Group Neurobiology of Language
Communicatie- en informatiewetenschappen
SW OZ DCC PL
Journal title
Neuropsychologia
Volume
vol. 111
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 123
Page end
p. 132
Subject
110 000 Neurocognition of Language; DI-BCB_DCC_Theme 1: Language and Communication; Language & Communication; Narrative and Mind; PsycholinguisticsAbstract
Learning often occurs in communicative and collaborative settings, yet almost all research into the neural basis of memory relies on participants encoding and retrieving information on their own. We investigated whether learning linguistic labels in a collaborative context at least partly relies on cognitively and neurally distinct representations, as compared to learning in an individual context. Healthy human participants learned labels for sets of abstract shapes in three different tasks. They came up with labels with another person in a collaborative communication task (collaborative condition), by themselves (individual condition), or were given pre-determined unrelated labels to learn by themselves (arbitrary condition). Immediately after learning, participants retrieved and produced the labels aloud during a communicative task in the MRI scanner. The fMRI results show that the retrieval of collaboratively generated labels as compared to individually learned labels engages brain regions involved in understanding others (mentalizing or theory of mind) and autobiographical memory, including the medial prefrontal cortex, the right temporoparietal junction and the precuneus. This study is the first to show that collaboration during encoding affects the neural networks involved in retrieval.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [227244]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3594]
- Electronic publications [108520]
- Faculty of Arts [28658]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28499]
- Open Access publications [77770]
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