Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?

An attempt is made to account for the ability of severely amnesic patients to learn and retain certain tasks but not others. The hypothesis is advanced that the amnesic subject can show learning through facilitation by repetition or of simple S-R relationships not requiring cognitive mediation. Thre...

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Main Authors: Warrington, E, Weiskrantz, L
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1982
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author Warrington, E
Weiskrantz, L
author_facet Warrington, E
Weiskrantz, L
author_sort Warrington, E
collection OXFORD
description An attempt is made to account for the ability of severely amnesic patients to learn and retain certain tasks but not others. The hypothesis is advanced that the amnesic subject can show learning through facilitation by repetition or of simple S-R relationships not requiring cognitive mediation. Three examinations are reported. The first demonstrates that the amnesic subjects have adequate speed of access to semantic and phonological knowledge and show the same degree of improvement on retesting as controls. The second and third experiments examine different degrees of cognitive mediation in paired-associate learning. Amnesic subjects are differentially impaired relative to controls on "distant" pairs and on those that, by hypothesis, would benefit from cognitive mediation. The results are discussed in terms of a disconnection syndrome. It is suggested that at the functional level, a "cognitive mediational memory system" and a semantic memory system are disconnected in the amnesic patient. Neuropathological evidence suggests that temporal lobe and frontal lobe structures are disconnected by pathways in the fornix-mammillary body route.
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spelling oxford-uuid:4493ebc2-62af-4793-960c-5fde087e20592022-03-26T15:02:27ZAmnesia: a disconnection syndrome?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4493ebc2-62af-4793-960c-5fde087e2059EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1982Warrington, EWeiskrantz, LAn attempt is made to account for the ability of severely amnesic patients to learn and retain certain tasks but not others. The hypothesis is advanced that the amnesic subject can show learning through facilitation by repetition or of simple S-R relationships not requiring cognitive mediation. Three examinations are reported. The first demonstrates that the amnesic subjects have adequate speed of access to semantic and phonological knowledge and show the same degree of improvement on retesting as controls. The second and third experiments examine different degrees of cognitive mediation in paired-associate learning. Amnesic subjects are differentially impaired relative to controls on "distant" pairs and on those that, by hypothesis, would benefit from cognitive mediation. The results are discussed in terms of a disconnection syndrome. It is suggested that at the functional level, a "cognitive mediational memory system" and a semantic memory system are disconnected in the amnesic patient. Neuropathological evidence suggests that temporal lobe and frontal lobe structures are disconnected by pathways in the fornix-mammillary body route.
spellingShingle Warrington, E
Weiskrantz, L
Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?
title Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?
title_full Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?
title_fullStr Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?
title_full_unstemmed Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?
title_short Amnesia: a disconnection syndrome?
title_sort amnesia a disconnection syndrome
work_keys_str_mv AT warringtone amnesiaadisconnectionsyndrome
AT weiskrantzl amnesiaadisconnectionsyndrome