Using Olfaction to Study Memory
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 855 (1), 657-669
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1998.tb10642.x
Abstract
In a series of studies we have been exploring the role of hippocampal function in memory using the model system of olfactory-hippocampal pathways and odor learning in rats. Our experiments show that hippocampus itself is not essential to memory for single odors, but is critical for forming the representations of relations among odor memories, and for the expression of odor memory representations in novel situations. These studies that exploit the exceptional qualities of olfactory learning are helping to clarify the nature of higher order memory processes in all mammals, and extending to declarative memory in humans.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- DECLARATIVE MEMORY: Insights from Cognitive NeurobiologyAnnual Review of Psychology, 1997
- Conservation of hippocampal memory function in rats and humansNature, 1996
- Selective damage to the hippocampal region blocks long‐term retention of a natural and nonspatial stimulus‐stimulus associationHippocampus, 1995
- On the implicit learning of novel associations by amnesic patients and normal subjects.Neuropsychology, 1993
- Learning‐related patterns of CA1 spike trains parallel stimulation parameters optimal for inducing hippocampal long‐term potentiationHippocampus, 1991
- Anterograde and retrograde amnesia in rats with dorsal hippocampal or dorsomedial thalamic lesionsBehavioural Brain Research, 1990
- Social transmission of food preferences in adult hooded rats (Rattus norvegicus).Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1984
- Social transmission of food preferences in adult hooded rats (Rattus norvegicus).Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1984
- Thalamocortical Mechanisms in Odor-Guided BehaviorBrain, Behavior and Evolution, 1980
- Cognitive maps in rats and men.Psychological Review, 1948