Specifying the Contributions of the Human Amygdala to Emotional Memory : A Case Study

We examined emotional memory in patient SP, a 54-yearold woman with bilateral damage to the amygdala. Consistent with previous case studies, SP showed deficits on tests of fear conditioning and recognition memory for arousing stimuli. SP's performance on several emotional episodic memory tasks was examined. We found that bilateral damage to the amygdala only leads to deficits on a subset of emotional episodic memory tasks. Specifically, the amygdala does not seem to be involved when episodic memory performance benefits from the valence of the stimuli. However, when episodic memory benefits from arousal, damage to the amygdala leads to a deficit in performance. Based on our results, we postulate that the amygdala is not involved when emotion enhances episodic memory primarily by contributing an organizing principle such as a schema or category. We expect the effects of amygdala damage to be limited to memory tasks affected by the neuromodulatory changes that occur with arousal. The effects of arousal on episodic memory would be most apparent in the rate of forgetting for arousing stimuli, the recall of arousing stimuli that have a weak central theme, and the recognition of details or events associated with arousing stimuli.

[1]  James A. Russell,et al.  Multidimensional scaling of emotional facial expressions: Similarity from preschoolers to adults. , 1985 .

[2]  E. Phelps,et al.  Arousal-Mediated Memory Consolidation: Role of the Medial Temporal Lobe in Humans , 1998 .

[3]  S. Paradiso The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life , 1998 .

[4]  R. Adolphs,et al.  Impaired declarative memory for emotional material following bilateral amygdala damage in humans. , 1997, Learning & memory.

[5]  Dennis D. Spencer,et al.  Memory for Emotional Words Following Unilateral Temporal Lobectomy , 1997, Brain and Cognition.

[6]  A. Wyler,et al.  Reorganization of Verbal Memory Function in Early Onset Left Temporal Lobe Epilepsy , 1997, Brain and Cognition.

[7]  E. Tulving,et al.  Toward a theory of episodic memory: the frontal lobes and autonoetic consciousness. , 1997, Psychological bulletin.

[8]  L. Nadel,et al.  Memory consolidation, retrograde amnesia and the hippocampal complex , 1997, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[9]  J. D. Nichols,et al.  Double dissociation of conditioning and declarative knowledge relative to the amygdala and hippocampus in humans. , 1997, Science.

[10]  Joseph E LeDoux,et al.  Impaired fear conditioning following unilateral temporal lobectomy in humans , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[11]  James L. McGaugh,et al.  The amygdala and emotional memory , 1995, Nature.

[12]  Pasquale Calabrese,et al.  The amygdala's contribution to memory—a study on two patients with Urbach‐Wiethe disease , 1994, Neuroreport.

[13]  M. Packard,et al.  Quinpirole and d-amphetamine administration posttraining enhances memory on spatial and cued discriminations in a water maze , 1994, Psychobiology.

[14]  Sven-Åke Christianson,et al.  Remembering Emotional Events: Potential Mechanisms , 1992 .

[15]  B T Hyman,et al.  Neuropsychological correlates of bilateral amygdala damage. , 1990, Archives of neurology.

[16]  G. Holmes,et al.  Memory performance following unilateral electrical stimulation of the hippocampus in a child with right temporal lobe epilepsy , 1990 .

[17]  Gregory P. Lee,et al.  Verbal and visual memory index discrepancies from the wechsler memory scale-revised: cautions in interpretation , 1989 .

[18]  Gregory P. Lee,et al.  Construct validity of material-specific memory measures following unilateral temporal lobe ablations. , 1989 .

[19]  Marilyn Jones-Gotman,et al.  Right hippocampal excision impairs learning and recall of a list of abstract designs , 1986, Neuropsychologia.

[20]  M. Banaji,et al.  Words high and low in pleasantness as rated by male and female college students , 1986 .

[21]  M. Banaji Affect and memory : an experimental investigation / , 1986 .

[22]  A. Wyler Surgery in Epilepsy , 1969, Journal of the Tennessee Medical Association.

[23]  A Ehrenfeucht,et al.  Organization of memory. , 1973, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[24]  R. Lockhart,et al.  Comments regarding multiple response phenomena in long interstimulus interval conditioning. , 2007, Psychophysiology.

[25]  D. Berlyne,et al.  Effects of stimulus complexity and induced arousal on paired-associate learning , 1965 .