There have been many brain scanning studies of how a brain looks when particular activities such as thinking or recall occur. Such studies will typically attempt to find some region of the brain that shows greater activity when some mental activity occurs. No matter how slight the evidence is that some particular region is being activated more strongly, that evidence will be reported and reported as a “neural correlate” of some activity. But a question we should be asking is: do any such studies actually show appreciable evidence of any neural correlate of the activity under examination?
We should not be starting out by asking, "Which region of the brain changes most when a mental activity occurs?" The first and most fundamental thing to consider is: does there exist appreciable evidence of any correlation between brain states and higher mental activity? Similarly, it is a mistake to start asking, "Which person's face appears most commonly in the clouds?" It is much better to start with a simpler question such as "Is there appreciable evidence of any person's face appearing in the clouds?"
There are several types of memory activity that can be identified:
(1) The acquisition of a new episodic memory through experience.
(2) The learning of a new physical skill by physical practice.
(3) The learning of new conceptual knowledge by school learning.
(4) Rote memorization, such as attempting to learn lists of words or names.
(5) The learning of a narrative by watching a play, TV show, or movie, or listening to a story being told.
(6) The recall of episodic memories a person has experienced.
(7) The recall of conceptual knowledge by someone answering a question or being asked to explain something.
(8) Visual recognition, in which someone identifies some building, place or person.
Although psychologists and neuroscientists often talk about "encoding," there is no understanding of any brain process by which knowledge is translated into synapse states or neural states. So when neuroscientists talk about "encoding" they are really just using a jargon word meaning "memory acquisition" or "learning."
Let us look at whether there is any appreciable evidence of neural correlates for any of the eight activities listed above.
Conceptual Learning or Memorization
- The study "Sustained Mnemonic Response in the Human Middle Frontal Gyrus during On-Line Storage of Spatial Memoranda" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain areas during a memorization task.
- The study "Neural correlates of visual short-term memory for objects with material categories" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain areas during a memorization task.
- The study "Neural correlates of encoding emotional memories: a review of functional neuroimaging evidence" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain areas during a memorization task.
- The study "Whole-brain functional correlates of memory formation in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain areas during memory formation.
- The study "State-related and item-related neural correlates of successful memory encoding" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain areas during memory formation.
- The study "The neural correlates of recognition memory for complex visual stimuli in the Medial Temporal Lobe" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 250 between different brain areas during "memory encoding activity for faces and scenes," and about 1 part in 1000 for "memory retrieval activity for faces and scenes."
- The paper "Neural correlates of multisensory perceptual learning" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 1000 between different brain areas
Memory Retrieval (Also Called Recollection)
- This brain scan study was entitled “Working Memory Retrieval: Contributions of the Left Prefrontal Cortex, the Left Posterior Parietal Cortex, and the Hippocampus.” Figure 4 and Figure 5 of the study shows that none of the memory retrievals produced more than a .3 percent signal change, so they all involved signal changes of merely about 1 part in 333 or smaller .
- In this study, brain scans were done during recognition activities, looking for signs of increased brain activity in the hippocampus, a region of the brain often described as some center of brain memory involvement. But the percent signal change is never more than .2 percent, that is, never more than 1 part in 500.
- The paper here is entitled, “Functional-anatomic correlates of remembering and knowing.” It shows a graph showing a percent signal change in the brain during memory retrieval that is no greater than .3 percent, less than 1 part in 300.
- The paper here is entitled “The neural correlates of specific versus general autobiographical memory construction and elaboration.” It shows various graphs showing a percent signal change in the brain during memory retrieval that is no greater than .07 percent, less than 1 part in 1000.
- The paper here is entitled “Neural correlates of true memory, false memory, and deception." It shows various graphs showing a percent signal change during memory retrieval that is no greater than .4 percent, 1 part in 250.
- This paper did a review of 12 other brain scanning studies pertaining to the neural correlates of recollection. Figure 3 of the paper shows an average signal change for different parts of the brain of only about .4 percent, 1 part in 250.
- This paper was entitled “Neural correlates of emotional memories: a review of evidence from brain imaging studies.” We learn from Figure 2 that none of the percent signal changes were greater than .4 percent, 1 part in 250.
- This study was entitled “Sex Differences in the Neural Correlates of Specific and General Autobiographical Memory.” Figure 2 shows that none of the differences in brain activity (for men or women) involved a percent signal change of more than .3 percent or 1 part in 333.
- A 2012 review study on "neural correlates of emotional memories" is one that we might expect to have a higher chance of showing a notable correlation, given the possibility of the emotions showing up as signal changes in the brain images. But the story reports no signal changes of greater than about 1 part in 1000 anywhere in the brain.
- A brain scan study looked for neural correlates of "episodic retrieval success" during memory recall. The paper reports percent signal changes no greater than about 1 part in 500.
- The study "Encoding Processes During Retrieval Tasks" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 300 between different brain states during episodic memory retrieval.
- The study "Neural activity associated with episodic memory for emotional context" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain states during episodic memory retrieval.
- The paper "Parietal lobe contributions to episodic memory retrieval" found found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain states during memory retrieval.
- The paper "Common and Unique Neural Activations in Autobiographical, Episodic, and Semantic Retrieval" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 200 between different brain states during memory retrieval.
- The paper "Functional-anatomic correlates of remembering and knowing" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 300 between different brain areas during memory retrieval.
- The paper "The role of the right prefrontal cortex in the retrieval of weak representations" found no difference of more than about 1 part in 500 between different brain areas during memory retrieval.
Recognition Memory
- The year 2000 study "Dissociating State and Item Componentsof Recognition Memory Using fMRI" found no difference in brain signals of more than 1 part in 100, with almost all of the charted differences being only about 1 part in 500.
- The study "Remembrance of Odors Past: Human Olfactory Cortex in Cross-Modal Recognition Memory" found no difference in brain signals of more than 1 part in 200.
- The study "Neural correlates of auditory recognition under full and divided attention in younger and older adults" found no difference in brain signals of more than 1 part in 500.
- The study "Neural Correlates of True Memory, False Memory, and Deception" asked people to make a judgment of whether they recognized words, some of which they had been asked to study. The study found no difference in brain signals of more than about 1 part in 300.
- The study "The Neural Correlates of Recollection: Hippocampal Activation Declines as Episodic Memory Fades" was one in which "participants performed a recognition task at both a short (10-min) and long (1-week) study-test delay." The study found no difference in brain signals of more than about 1 part in 300.
- The study "The neural correlates of everyday recognition memory" found no difference in brain signals of more than about 1 part in 500.
- The study "Neural correlates of audio‐visual object recognition: Effects of implicit spatial congruency" was one in which participants attempted a recognition task. The study found no difference in brain signals of more than about 1 part in 200.
Size of correlation | Interpretation of correlation |
.90 to 1.00 | Very high correlation |
.70 to .90 | High correlation |
.50 to .70 | Moderate correlation |
.30 to .50 | Low correlation |
.00 to .30 | Negligible correlation |
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