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Cerebral Cortex 2007 17(Supplement 1):i27-i40; doi:10.1093/cercor/bhm086
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Ventrolateral Prefrontal Neuronal Activity Related to Active Controlled Memory Retrieval in Nonhuman Primates

Geneviève Cadoret and Michael Petrides

Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, 3801 University Street, Montréal, Québec H3A 2B4, Canada

Address correspondence to Michael Petrides, Montreal Neurological Institute, 3801 University Street, Montreal H3A 2B4, Quebec, Canada. Email: petrides{at}ego.psych.mcgill.ca.

It is controversial whether monkeys, like human subjects, can recall, upon instruction, specific information about an event in memory. We therefore tested macaque monkeys on a task that was originally developed to study such active controlled memory retrieval in human subjects and we were able to demonstrate that monkeys, like human subjects, can retrieve, upon command, specific components of previously encoded events. Furthermore, following earlier functional neuroimaging work with human subjects showing the mid-ventrolateral prefrontal cortex to be involved in such active controlled retrieval, we recorded single-neuron activity within this region of the monkey brain while the monkeys performed the active retrieval task. Neuronal responses were related to the retrieval and the decision whether the retrieved information was the instructed one. These findings demonstrate, for the first time, an impressive capacity by macaque monkeys for controlled memory retrieval and, in addition, provide neurophysiological evidence about the role of the mid-ventrolateral prefrontal cortex in such controlled retrieval.

Key Words: controlled memory retrieval • macaque monkeys • neurophysiology • prefrontal cortex • working memory


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