TY - JOUR
T1 - Dissociable Neural Routes to Successful Prospective Memory
AU - McDaniel, Mark A.
AU - LaMontagne, Pamela
AU - Beck, Stefanie M.
AU - Scullin, Michael K.
AU - Braver, Todd S.
PY - 2013/9
Y1 - 2013/9
N2 - Identifying the processes by which people remember to execute an intention at an appropriate moment (prospective memory) remains a fundamental theoretical challenge. According to one account, top-down attentional control is required to maintain activation of the intention, initiate intention retrieval, or support monitoring. A diverging account suggests that bottom-up, spontaneous retrieval can be triggered by cues that have been associated with the intention and that sustained attentional processes are not required. We used a specialized experimental design and functional MRI methods to selectively marshal and identify each process. Results revealed a clear dissociation. One prospective-memory task recruited sustained activity in attentional-control areas, such as the anterior prefrontal cortex; the other engaged purely transient activity in parietal and ventral brain regions associated with attentional capture, target detection, and episodic retrieval. These patterns provide critical evidence that there are two neural routes to prospective memory, with each route emerging under different circumstances.
AB - Identifying the processes by which people remember to execute an intention at an appropriate moment (prospective memory) remains a fundamental theoretical challenge. According to one account, top-down attentional control is required to maintain activation of the intention, initiate intention retrieval, or support monitoring. A diverging account suggests that bottom-up, spontaneous retrieval can be triggered by cues that have been associated with the intention and that sustained attentional processes are not required. We used a specialized experimental design and functional MRI methods to selectively marshal and identify each process. Results revealed a clear dissociation. One prospective-memory task recruited sustained activity in attentional-control areas, such as the anterior prefrontal cortex; the other engaged purely transient activity in parietal and ventral brain regions associated with attentional capture, target detection, and episodic retrieval. These patterns provide critical evidence that there are two neural routes to prospective memory, with each route emerging under different circumstances.
KW - cognitive neuroscience
KW - memory
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84883748892
U2 - 10.1177/0956797613481233
DO - 10.1177/0956797613481233
M3 - Article
C2 - 23907544
AN - SCOPUS:84883748892
SN - 0956-7976
VL - 24
SP - 1791
EP - 1800
JO - Psychological Science
JF - Psychological Science
IS - 9
ER -