Brain, Vol. 126, No. 5, 1112-1126,
May 2003
© 2003 Guarantors of Brain
doi: 10.1093/brain/awg112
Source versus content memory in patients with a unilateral frontal cortex or a temporal lobe excision
1 Victoria General Hospital, Victoria, British Columbia and 2 Montreal Neurological Institute and Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Correspondence to: Laila Thaiss, Department of Pediatric Psychology, Victoria General Hospital, 1 Hospital Way, Victoria, British Columbia V8Z 6R5, Canada E-mail: laila.thaiss{at}mail.mcgill.ca
It has been suggested previously that patients with a frontal lobe lesion might have a specific impairment in the retrieval of the source of information despite adequate memory for facts. Patients with an anterior temporal excision are known to have impairments in memory for facts and the question arises as to whether they are also impaired in source memory. The present study compared memory for facts and their source in patients with a unilateral frontal cortical or an anterior temporal excision in a situation in which both types of information were encoded explicitly. Patients with a unilateral frontal cortex or a temporal lobe excision watched videos of a game show and were instructed to attend to both the trivia facts and their source (the identity of the speaker or the relative time of presentation). Patients with a frontal cortex excision were not impaired on either fact or source memory. This was true even when a subgroup of patients with an excision involving the dorsolateral frontal cortex was examined. In contrast, patients with a left temporal lobe excision were impaired in both fact and identity source memory and right temporal lobe patients were impaired in identity source memory. All patients performed similarly to normal controls in temporal source memory. The present results are consistent with the view that source information is part of an associative network of information about an episode and that the medial temporal region is critical for both source and content memory. Furthermore, if source information is encoded explicitly, the frontal cortex does not appear to be necessary for its retrieval. Instead, it is proposed that the frontal cortex plays a metacognitive role in memory retrieval.
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