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Brain Advance Access originally published online on April 25, 2006
Brain 2006 129(6):1399-1414; doi:10.1093/brain/awl093
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© The Author (2006). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Mechanisms of spontaneous confabulations: a strategic retrieval account

Asaf Gilboa1,5, Claude Alain1,2, Donald T. Stuss1,2,3, Brenda Melo4, Sarah Miller2 and Morris Moscovitch1,2

1 Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Centre, University of Toronto Ontario, Canada 2 Department of Psychology, University of Toronto Ontario, Canada 3 Department of Medicine (Neurology, Rehabilitation Science), University of Toronto Ontario, Canada 4 Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto Ontario, Canada 5 Department of Psychology, University of Haifa Haifa, Israel

Correspondence to: Asaf Gilboa, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa 31905, Israel E-mail: agilboa{at}psy.haifa.ac.il

The ‘temporality’ hypothesis of confabulation posits that confabulations are true memories displaced in time, while the ‘strategic retrieval’ hypothesis suggests a general retrieval failure of which temporal confusion is a common symptom. Four confabulating patients with rupture of an anterior communicating artery (ACoA) aneurysm, eight non-confabulating ACoA controls and 16 normal controls participated in three experiments designed to test the two hypotheses. In Experiment 1, participants were tested on two continuous recognition tasks, one requiring temporal context distinctions, previously shown to be sensitive to confabulation and another that only requires content distinctions. Both manipulations were sensitive to confabulation, but not specific to it. Temporal context and content confusions (TCCs and CCs) can be explained as failures to make fine-grained distinctions within memory. In Experiment 2, free recall of semantic narratives that require strategic retrieval but are independent of temporal context was used to induce confabulations associated with remote memory, acquired before the onset of amnesia. Confabulators produced significantly more errors. Thus, when retrieval demands are equated, confabulations can be induced in the absence of temporal confusions. Only confabulators conflated semantic content from different remote semantic narratives and introduced idiosyncratic content, suggesting that qualitatively different mechanisms are responsible for distortions due to normal memory failure and for confabulation. Lesion analyses revealed that damage to ventromedial prefrontal cortex is sufficient for temporal context errors to occur, but additional orbitofrontal damage is crucial for spontaneous confabulation. In Experiment 3, we tested whether failure in memory monitoring is crucial for confabulation. Recognition of details from semantic and autobiographical narratives was used to minimize the initiation and search components of strategic retrieval. Only confabulators made more false alarms on both tasks, endorsed even highly implausible lures related to autobiographical events and were indiscriminately confident about their choices. These findings support a strategic retrieval account of confabulation of which monitoring is a critical component. Post-retrieval monitoring has at least two components: one is early, rapid and pre-conscious and the other is conscious and elaborate. Failure of at least the former is necessary and sufficient for confabulation. Other deficits, including TCC and CC, may be required for spontaneous confabulations to arise. The confluence of different sub-components of strategic retrieval would determine the content of confabulation and exacerbate its occurrence.

Key Words: spontaneous confabulations; provoked confabulations; confabulatory amnesia; temporal context confusion; content confusion strategic retrieval; aneurysms

Abbreviations: ACoA, anterior communicating artery; CC, content confusion; FOK, feeling of knowing; FOR, feeling of rightness; MTL, medial temporal lobe; PFC, prefrontal cortex; TCC, temporal context confusion

Received October 31, 2005. Revised February 17, 2006. Accepted March 22, 2006.


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