ABSTRACT
Information regarding the nature of phenomenal awareness in memory comes from a direct
comparison of explicit and implicit memory tasks. Explicit memory tasks require conscious
awareness of a prior episode, whereas implicit memory tasks do not. This paper reviews
evidence regarding the neural basis of aware and unaware forms of memory as obtained
from patient studies and functional neuroimaging work. These studies suggest the existence
of a memory system centered in the medial temporal and frontal lobes that is dedicated
to the storage and retrieval of episodes and several neocortical memory systems that
are dedicated to the processing and representation of perceptual and semantic information.
Different hypotheses are discussed as to how the phenomenal awareness that accompanies
episodic memories may arise within the hippocampal-frontal memory system. These views
have in common the notion that various forms of information need to be bound together
to be retrievable as an aware memory, and that the hippocampus is critical to this
binding function.
Keywords
explicit memory - implicit memory - awareness - priming - amnesia - memory systems
- hippocampus