TY - JOUR
T1 - The “eyes have it,” but when in development?
T2 - The importance of a developmental perspective in our understanding of behavioral memory formation and the hippocampus
AU - Edgin, Jamie O.
AU - Liu, Yating
AU - Hughes, Katharine
AU - Spanò, Goffredina
AU - Clark, Caron A.C.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was funded from a National Institutes of Health R01 HD088409 (to JOE). We are grateful to the families that participated in this research and to Debbie Hannula for sharing her stimuli with us. The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request. We would also like to thank all the colleagues and collaborators who supplied quotes regarding Lynn's influence presented at his Festschrift and to Len Abbeduto for the quote featured here. Last, we offer a brief personal note (from JOE). In re-reading his earlier work to prepare this manuscript, I was reminded how prolific and influential many of Lynn's writings have been, and in so many areas of Psychology and Neuroscience. The same man who changed the way we understand memory formation and space also radically changed the fields of memory development and Down syndrome. Beyond his extensive academic accomplishments, he is a man who brings scholars together to create community. He openly offers his time and wisdom to those he has mentored and his colleagues. He is the most influential academic and personal mentor of my life, and for that I am grateful.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2020/8/1
Y1 - 2020/8/1
N2 - Lynn Nadel has been a trailblazer in memory research for decades. In just one example, Nadel and Zola-Morgan [Infantile amnesia, In Infant memory, Springer, Boston, MA, 1984, pp. 145–172] were the first to present the provocative notion that the extended development of the hippocampus may underlie the period of infantile amnesia. In this special issue of Hippocampus to honor Lynn Nadel, we review some of his major contributions to the field of memory development, with an emphasis on his observations that behavioral memory assessments follow an uneven, yet protracted developmental course. We present data emphasizing this point from memory-related eye movements [Hannula & Ranganath, Neuron, 2009, 63(5), 592–599]. Eye tracking is a sensitive behavioral measure, allowing for an indication of memory function even without overt responses, which is seemingly ideal for the investigation of memory in early childhood or in other nonverbal populations. However, the behavioral manifestation of these eye movements follows a U-shaped trajectory—and one that must be understood before these indictors could be broadly used as a marker of memory. We examine the change in preferential looking time to target stimuli in school-aged children and adults, and compare these eye movement responses to explicit recall measures. Our findings indicate change in the nature and timing of these eye movements in older children, causing us to question how 6-month-old infants may produce eye movements that initially appear to have the same properties as those measured in adulthood. We discuss these findings in the context of our current understanding of memory development, particularly the period of infantile amnesia.
AB - Lynn Nadel has been a trailblazer in memory research for decades. In just one example, Nadel and Zola-Morgan [Infantile amnesia, In Infant memory, Springer, Boston, MA, 1984, pp. 145–172] were the first to present the provocative notion that the extended development of the hippocampus may underlie the period of infantile amnesia. In this special issue of Hippocampus to honor Lynn Nadel, we review some of his major contributions to the field of memory development, with an emphasis on his observations that behavioral memory assessments follow an uneven, yet protracted developmental course. We present data emphasizing this point from memory-related eye movements [Hannula & Ranganath, Neuron, 2009, 63(5), 592–599]. Eye tracking is a sensitive behavioral measure, allowing for an indication of memory function even without overt responses, which is seemingly ideal for the investigation of memory in early childhood or in other nonverbal populations. However, the behavioral manifestation of these eye movements follows a U-shaped trajectory—and one that must be understood before these indictors could be broadly used as a marker of memory. We examine the change in preferential looking time to target stimuli in school-aged children and adults, and compare these eye movement responses to explicit recall measures. Our findings indicate change in the nature and timing of these eye movements in older children, causing us to question how 6-month-old infants may produce eye movements that initially appear to have the same properties as those measured in adulthood. We discuss these findings in the context of our current understanding of memory development, particularly the period of infantile amnesia.
KW - Down syndrome
KW - Lynn Nadel
KW - development
KW - eye-tracking
KW - hippocampus
KW - infantile amnesia
KW - memory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85071368995&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85071368995&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/hipo.23149
DO - 10.1002/hipo.23149
M3 - Article
C2 - 31465140
AN - SCOPUS:85071368995
SN - 1050-9631
VL - 30
SP - 815
EP - 828
JO - Hippocampus
JF - Hippocampus
IS - 8
ER -