Abstract
Overdependence on discrimination learning paradigms to assess the function of perirhinal cortex has complicated understanding of the cognitive role of this structure. Impairments in discrimination learning can result from at least two distinct causes: (a) failure to accurately apprehend and represent the relevant stimuli, or (b) failure to form and remember associations between stimulus representations and reward. Thus, the results of discrimination learning experiments do not readily differentiate deficits in perception from deficits in learning and memory. Here I describe studies that do dissociate learning and memory from perception and show that perirhinal cortex damage impairs learning and/or memory, but not perception. Reanalysis and reconsideration of other published data call into further question the hypothesis that the monkey perirhinal cortex plays a critical role in visual perception.
Acknowledgments
The experimental work conducted by the author was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program. Preparation of the manuscript was supported by Yerkes National Primate Research Center Base Grant RR00165. Heather Kirby provided assistance with the figures and provided comments on earlier drafts.