iScience (Dec 2024)

Context familiarity is a third kind of episodic memory distinct from item familiarity and recollection

  • Richard J. Addante,
  • Evan Clise,
  • Randall Waechter,
  • Jesse Bengson,
  • Daniel L. Drane,
  • Jahdiel Perez-Caban

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 12
p. 111439

Abstract

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Summary: Episodic memory is accounted for with two processes: “familiarity” when generally recognizing an item and “recollection” when retrieving the full contextual details bound with the item. We tested a combination of item recognition confidence and source memory, focusing upon three conditions: “item-only hits with source unknown” (‘item familiarity’), “low-confidence hits with correct source memory” (‘context familiarity’), and “high-confidence hits with correct source memory” (‘recollection’). Behaviorally, context familiarity was slower than the others during item recognition, but faster during source memory. Electrophysiologically, a triple dissociation was evident in event-related potentials (ERPs), which was independently replicated. Context familiarity exhibited a negative effect from 800 to 1200 ms, differentiated from positive ERPs for item-familiarity (400–600 ms) and recollection (600–900 ms). These three conditions thus reflect mutually exclusive, fundamentally different processes of episodic memory, and we offer a new, tri-component model of memory. Context familiarity is a third distinct process of episodic memory.

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