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    Exploring aspects of memory in healthy ageing and following stroke

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    Memory is critical for everyday functioning. Remembering an event with rich detail requires the ability to remember the temporal order of occurrences within the event and spatial locations associated with it. But it remains unclear whether it also requires memory for the perspective from which we encoded the event, whether these three aspects of memory are affected following stroke, and which are the key brain regions upon which they rely. These questions are explored in this thesis. In the first study presented here, I examined young and elderly healthy subjects with an autobiographical memory interview and a 2D spatial memory task assessing self-perspective, and found no correlation between performance on these tasks. In the second experimental study, by assessing stroke patients on a 3D spatio-temporal memory task, I found that damage to the right intraparietal sulcus was associated with poorer memory for temporal order. However, voxelwise analyses detected no association between parietal lobe regions and accuracy in the egocentric condition of this task, or between medial temporal lobe regions and accuracy in the allocentric condition, one possible reason being that performance was near ceiling. In the third experimental study, by assessing a considerably larger group of stroke patients on a spatial memory task, I found that, as a group, patients performed worse than healthy controls, and performance was correlated with an activities of daily living scale. A spatial memory network was identified in right (but not left) hemisphere stroke patients. These findings provide evidence that spatial memory impairment is common after stroke, highlight its potential functional relevance, and increase our understanding of which regions are critical for remembering temporal order and spatial information. Furthermore, they suggest a dissociation between the mechanisms underpinning recall of 2D scenes over relatively short intervals versus remembering of real-life events across periods of many years.Open Acces
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