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Cognitive Neuroscience
Current Debates, Research & Reports
Volume 3, 2012 - Issue 1
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Original Articles

Visual memory and visual mental imagery recruit common control and sensory regions of the brain

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Pages 14-20 | Received 21 Dec 2010, Accepted 27 Mar 2011, Published online: 03 Jun 2011
 

Abstract

Separate lines of research have shown that visual memory and visual mental imagery are mediated by frontal-parietal control regions and can rely on occipital-temporal sensory regions of the brain. We used fMRI to assess the degree to which visual memory and visual mental imagery rely on the same neural substrates. During the familiarization/study phase, participants studied drawings of objects. During the test phase, words corresponding to old and new objects were presented. In the memory test, participants responded “remember,” “know,” or “new.” In the imagery test, participants responded “high vividness,” “moderate vividness,” or “low vividness.” Visual memory (old-remember) and visual imagery (old-high vividness) were commonly associated with activity in frontal-parietal control regions and occipital-temporal sensory regions. In addition, visual memory produced greater activity than visual imagery in parietal and occipital-temporal regions. The present results suggest that visual memory and visual imagery rely on highly similar––but not identical––cognitive processes.

Acknowledgments

We thank Preston Thakral for assistance with data acquisition. This work was supported by NSF grant BCS0745880 (to S.D.S).

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