Interictal disturbances of memory and attention were evaluated in 74 adults with newly-diagnosed untreated epileptic seizures and no other known brain pathology. In approximately 30% of the patients with cryptogenic seizures, the average memory and attention scores indicated subtle dysfunction compared with normal control group. The patients had difficulties in tasks requiring memory, sustained attention and flexible mental processing, whereas they had normal attention span, simple speed of tracking and simple psychomotor speed. The memory difficulties may be related to attentional dysfunction leading to impaired or slowed initial encoding of memory trace, and also to a deficit in storing process and hippocampal dysfunction. These findings could have important implications for establishing criteria for identifying patients who develop chronic epilepsy and who thereby would benefit from early therapeutic intervention.