Abstract
A prominent and long-standing view of human long-term memory is that structures within the medial temporal lobe (MTL) work together to support the acquisition of memory for facts and events. In contrast to this view, recent studies in rats and non-human primates suggest dissociations in function between regions comprising the MTL. Evidence in support of such specialisation in humans, however, has been inconclusive, leading some researchers to propose that human MTL functions as a unitary system uniquely specialised for the acquisition and storage of long-term memory. This paper reviews some of the key studies from the animal and human literature that support an account of functional differentiation and discusses the different theoretical positions that have emerged from their findings. A series of recent experiments in humans designed to determine whether there is functional homogeneity in MTL regions across species are also reviewed and an alternative account of human memory—in which long-term memory is dependent upon representations distributed throughout the human brain rather than one specialised system—is proposed.
Acknowledgements
It was a great honour to be awarded the European Society for Cognitive Psychology Bertelson Prize in 2005, an accolade that would not have been possible without the valued contributions of my colleagues, collaborators, and students over the years. In keeping with this sentiment, two of my current research colleagues are authors on this paper; the work cited within emerged out of many discussions with them, and is a truly collaborative effort. I would also like to thank the participants in our experiments for their time and patience, as well as my many collaborators on much of this work—Mark Buckley, Tim Bussey, David Gaffan, Rik Henson, Betsy Murray, and Lisa Saksida. The Medical Research Council (UK) and the Alzheimer's Research Trust (UK) funded this research.