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Semantic memory

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Semantic memory refers to the memory of meanings, understandings, and other factual knowledge; in contrast to episodic memory. Semantic and episodic memory together make up the broader category of declarative memory, which is one of the two major divisions in memory. The counterpart to declarative, or explicit memory is called nondeclarative, procedural, or implicit memory, depending on which research team is queried.

The cognitive neuroscience of semantic memory is a somewhat controversial issue with two dominant views:

  1. On the one hand, many researchers and clinicians believe that semantic memory is stored by the same brain systems involved in episodic memory. These include the medial temporal lobes (MTL) and hippocampal formation. In this system, the hippocampal formation "encodes" memories, or makes it possible for memories to form at all, and the cortex stores memories after the initial encoding process is completed.
  2. *Recently, new evidence has been presented in support of a more precise interpretation of this hypothesis. The hippocampal formation includes, among other structures: the hippocampus itself, the entorhinal cortex, and the perirhinal cortex. These latter two make up the "parahippocampal cortices". Amnesics with damage to the hippocampus but some spared parahippocampal cortex were able to demonstrate some degree of intact semantic memory despite a total loss of episodic memory. This strongly suggests that semantic memory has its physiological basis in these parahippocampal cortices. (Vargha-Kadem et al.)
  3. Other researchers believe the hippocampus is only involved in episodic memory and spatial cognition. This then raises the question where semantic memory may be located. Some believe semantic memory lives in temporal neocortex. Others believe that semantic knowledge is widely distributed across all brain areas. To illustrate this latter view, consider your knowledge of dogs. Researchers holding the 'distributed semantic knowledge' view believe that your knowledge of the sound a dog makes exists in your auditory cortex, whilst your ability to recognize and imagine the visual features of a dog resides in your visual cortex. Perhaps all these representations are indexed by the left temporal pole, a region particularly vulnerable to damage in semantic dementia.
The cited reference was subsequently withdrawn from print. Please see Science 1997 Aug 22; 277(5329):1117 for erratum.

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