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The [[hippocampus]] participates in the [[encoding (memory)|encoding]], [[memory consolidation|consolidation]], and retrieval of memories.<ref name=a /> The hippocampus is located in the medial temporal lobe (subcortical), and is an infolding of the medial temporal cortex.<ref name=a>Gazzaniga, Michael S., Richard B. Ivry, and G. R. Mangun. "Chapter 9: Memory." Cognitive Neuroscience: The Biology of the Mind. 4th ed. New York: W. W. Norton, 2014. 378-423. Print.</ref> The hippocampus plays an important role in the transfer of information from [[short-term memory]] to [[long-term memory]] during encoding and retrieval stages. These stages do not need to occur successively, but are, as studies seem to indicate, and they are broadly divided in the neuronal mechanisms that they require or even in the hippocampal areas that they seem to activate. According to Gazzaniga, "encoding is the processing of incoming information that creates memory traces to be stored."<ref name=a /> There are two steps to the encoding process: "acquisition" and "consolidation". During the acquisition process, stimuli are committed to
==Theories and reasoning==
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===HIPER (hippocampal encoding/retrieval) model===
Meta-[[positron emission tomography]] (PET) analysis has lent support toward a division of the hippocampus between caudal and rostral regions.<ref name=b>{{cite journal | last1 = Lepage | first1 = M. | last2 = Habib | first2 = R. | last3 = Tulving | first3 = E. | year = 1998 | title = Lepage, M., Habib, R. & Tulving, E. Hippocampal PET Activations of memory encoding and retrieval: the HIPER model" ''Hippocampus'' 8, 313-322 | journal = Hippocampus | volume = 8 | issue = 4| pages = 313–22 | doi = 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1063(1998)8:4<313::AID-HIPO1>3.0.CO;2-I | pmid = 9744418 | s2cid = 14507536 }}</ref> Scans have demonstrated a uniform variation in blood flow distribution within the hippocampus (and the medial temporal lobe broadly) during the separate processes of episodic encoding and retrieval.<ref name=b /> In the hippocampal encoding/retrieval (HIPER) model, episodic encoding is found to take place within the rostral region of the hippocampus whereas retrieval takes place in the caudal region.<ref name=b /> However, the divide between these regions need not be disjoint, as [[functional magnetic resonance imaging]] (fMRI) data has demonstrated encoding processes occurring within the caudal region.<ref name=b />
HIPER is a model resulting from and therefore a reflection of certain experimental phenomena, but cannot completely explain hippocampal encoding and retrieval on its own.<ref name=b /> Nevertheless, the model suggests a broad division of labor in encoding and retrieval, whether they involve separate regions of the hippocampus or act simultaneously or independently within a single, more inclusive process.
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===Theta phase separation===
In a framework first developed by Hasselmo and colleagues, theta phase separation implies that the [[hippocampal theta rhythm
CA3 is significant as it
===Reconsolidation hypothesis===
{{Main|Memory reconsolidation}}
The reconsolidation hypothesis claims that objects encoded into long term memory experience a new period of consolidation, or the time and resource expended to stabilize a memory object, upon each recollection. This is in opposition to the classical consolidation hypothesis which regards consolidation as a one-time event, following the first encoding of a memory. A memory item in this hypothesis, upon reactivation, destabilizes for a brief period and thereafter invokes the neuronal processes requisite for stabilization.<ref name=d>{{cite journal | last1 = Morris | first1 = R. G. M. | last2 = Inglis | first2 = J. | last3 = Ainge | first3 = J. A. | last4 = Olverman | first4 = H. J. | last5 = Tulloch | first5 = J. | last6 = Dudai | first6 = Y. | last7 = Kelly | first7 = P. A. T. | year = 2006 | title = Memory reconsolidation: Sensitivity of spatial memory to inhibition of protein synthesis in dorsal hippocampus during encoding and retrieval | journal = Neuron | volume = 50 | issue = 3| pages = 479–489 | doi = 10.1016/j.neuron.2006.04.012 | pmid=16675401| doi-access = free }}</ref>
The reconsolidation hypothesis has lingered since the 1960s; however, a 2000 study, entitled "Fear memories require protein synthesis in the amygdala for reconsolidation after retrieval", examining fear conditioning in rats, has provided evidence in its favor.<ref name=e>{{cite journal | last1 = Nader | first1 = Karim | last2 = Schafe | first2 = Glenn E. | last3 = Le Doux | first3 = Joseph E. | year = 2000 | title = Fear Memories Require Protein Synthesis In The Amygdala For Reconsolidation After Retrieval | journal = Nature | volume = 406 | issue = 6797| pages = 722–726 | doi = 10.1038/35021052 | pmid=10963596| bibcode = 2000Natur.406..722N | s2cid = 4420637 }}</ref> After receiving post-retrieval an intra-amygdalar infusion of a known amnesic agent, anisomycin, rats failed to recall a rapidly learned fear memory.<ref name=e /> Hippocampal lesions formed post-retrieval affected the rats' fear conditioning in a similar manner.<ref name=e />
The reconsolidation hypothesis does not suppose that subsequent and precedent consolidation phases are necessarily identical in duration or in the neural mechanisms involved. Nevertheless, the commonality that exists in every consolidation phase is a short-lived destabilization of a memory object and a susceptibility for said object to react to amnesic agents—principally protein synthesis inhibitors.<ref name=d /> Morris and colleagues' experiment indicates that the reconsolidation hypothesis could apply to particular memory types such as allocentric spatial memory, which is either acquired slowly or rapidly. As implied by the authors, however, such an application is feasible only in the case of rapidly acquired spatial memory, the degree to which is influenced by how thoroughly a spatial object is trained.<ref name=d />
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===Methods===
In an experiment performed by Zeineh and colleagues, ten subjects were scanned by fMRI while engaged in a face-name associative task that linked a sequence of faces unknown to the participants with the names of the individuals to whom they belonged.<ref name=j>{{cite journal | last1 = Zeineh | first1 = M | year = 2003 | title = Dynamics of the Hippocampus During Encoding and Retrieval of Face-Name Pairs | journal = Science | volume = 299 | issue = 5606| pages = 577–580 | doi = 10.1126/science.1077775 | pmid=12543980| bibcode = 2003Sci...299..577Z | s2cid = 2361898 }}</ref> The hippocampus is known to play a role in the encoding of memory that associates between a face and a name. The experiment began by dividing encoding blocks, in which the participants viewed and attempted to memorize the faces paired with the names, from retrieval blocks, in which the participants were shown only the faces and asked to match them with their names. This process was completed four times.<ref name=j /> Rote rehearsal was discouraged by a distractive task administered between encoding and recall blocks.<ref name=j />
===Results===
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[[Category:Memory
[[Category:Hippocampus (brain)]]
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