Search results for "Recognition memory"
showing 3 items of 63 documents
Mitochondrial cannabinoid receptors gate corticosterone impact on novel object recognition
2023
: Corticosteroid-mediated stress responses require the activation of complex brain circuits involving mitochondrial activity, but the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms are scantly known. The endocannabinoid system is implicated in stress coping, and it can directly regulate brain mitochondrial functions via type 1 cannabinoid (CB1) receptors associated with mitochondrial membranes (mtCB1). In this study, we show that the impairing effect of corticosterone in the novel object recognition (NOR) task in mice requires mtCB1 receptors and the regulation of mitochondrial calcium levels in neurons. Different brain circuits are modulated by this mechanism to mediate the impact of cortico…
Low frequency rTMS over the right parietal cortex at retrieval increases recognition memory in healthy subjects
2013
Neuroimaging and lesion studies have led to contrasting findings regarding the potential role of the parietal lobe in episodic memory. Imaging studies strongly suggest an important participation of the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) in episodic memory, whereas lesion studies are not conclusive at this regard. Using off-line 1 Hz rTMS paradigm, we conducted 2 experiments to investigate the role of PPCs in recognition memory. Real or sham rTMS were applied over the left or the right PPC (P3 and P4 of the 10–20 EEG system) of healthy subjects before encoding (Experiment 1) and just before retrieval (Experiment 2) of forced-choice non verbal recognition memory tasks. rTMS over the left and the…
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Trains at 1 Hz Frequency of the Right Posterior Parietal Cortex Facilitate Recognition Memory
2021
Neuroimaging, neuropsychological, and brain stimulation studies have led to contrasting findings regarding the potential roles of the lateral parietal lobe in episodic memory. Studies using brain stimulation methods reported in the literature do not offer unequivocal findings on the interactions with stimulation location (left vs. right hemisphere) or timing of the stimulation (encoding vs. retrieval). To address these issues, active and sham 1 Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) trains of 600 stimuli were applied over the right or left posterior parietal cortex (PPC) before the encoding or before the retrieval phase of a recognition memory task of unknown faces in a grou…