Abstract

Endel Tulving's episodic memory framework emphasizes the multifaceted re-experiencing of personal events. Indeed, decades of research focused on the experiential nature of episodic memories, usually treating recent episodic memory as a coherent experiential quality. However, recent insights into the functional architecture of the medial temporal lobe show that different types of mnemonic information are segregated into distinct neural pathways in brain circuits empirically associated with episodic memory. Moreover, recent memories do not fade as a whole under conditions of progressive neurodegeneration in these brain circuits, notably in Alzheimer's disease. Instead, certain memory content seem particularly vulnerable from the moment of their encoding while other content can remain memorable consistently across individuals and contexts. We propose that these observations are related to the content-specific functional architecture of the medial temporal lobe and consequently to a content-specific impairment of memory at different stages of the neurodegeneration. To develop Endel Tulving's inspirational legacy further and to advance our understanding of how memory function is affected by neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, we postulate that it is compelling to focus on the representational content of recent episodic memories.

Highlights

  • Endel Tulving’s episodic memory framework emphasizes the multifaceted re-experiencing of personal events

  • Thereby episodic memory is distinct from semantic memory, which he described as “a mental thesaurus [that] organize[s] knowledge a person possess[es]” (Tulving, 1972)

  • We argue that it is timely to develop the assessment of memories based on their experiential nature further towards a focus on the explicit content that a memory represents in order to understand how memory function is affected by disease

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Summary

Introduction

Endel Tulving’s episodic memory framework emphasizes the multifaceted re-experiencing of personal events. Endel Tulving’s conceptual distinction of episodic and semantic memory marks a major advance in memory research It has remained hugely influential in basic and clinical research aimed to unravel the neural processes that allow experiences to be remembered. The coherent experiential nature of episodic memory is an important component of Tulving’s theory which he developed further in the 1980’s and 1990’s (Düzel et al, 1997; Tulving, 1985; Schacter and Tulving, 1994) He posited that episodic memory is governed by a particular type of conscious awareness of information about previously experienced events: autonoetic awareness (Tulving, 1985; Wheeler et al, 1997). Impaired autonoetic awareness of events was reflected in the inability to remember, that is mentally ‘re-live’ information, and the rather selective impairment of neural signatures reflecting remembering (Düzel et al, 2001)

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