Kim J J, Andreasen N C, O'Leary D S, Wiser A K, Ponto L L, Watkins G L, Hichwa R D
Mental Health Clinical Research Center, University of Iowa, College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Brain. 1999 Jun;122 ( Pt 6):1069-83. doi: 10.1093/brain/122.6.1069.
For the purpose of identifying the relatively specific brain regions related to word and face recognition memory on the one hand and the regions common to both on the other, regional cerebral blood flow associated with different cognitive tasks for recognition memory was examined using [H215O]PET in healthy volunteers. The tasks consisted of recognizing two types of stimuli (faces and words) in two conditions (novel and familiar), and two baseline tasks (reading words and gender classification). The statistical analyses used to identify the specific regions consisted of three subtractions: novel words minus novel faces, familiar words minus familiar faces, and reading words minus gender classification. These analyses revealed relative differences in the brain circuitry used for recognizing words and for recognizing faces within a defined level of familiarity. In order to find the regions common to both face and word recognition, overlapping areas in four subtractions (novel words minus reading words, novel faces minus gender classification, familiar words minus reading words, and familiar faces minus gender classification) were identified. The results showed that the activation sites in word recognition tended to be lateralized to the left hemisphere and distributed as numerous small loci, and particularly included the posterior portion of the left middle and inferior temporal gyri. These regions may be related to lexical retrieval during written word recognition. In contrast, the activated regions for face recognition tended to be lateralized to the right hemisphere and located in a large aggregated area, including the right lingual and fusiform gyri. These findings suggest that strikingly different neural pathways are engaged during recognition memory for words and for faces, in which a critical role in discrimination is played by semantic cueing and perceptual loading, respectively. In addition, the investigation of the regions common to word and face recognition indicates that the anterior and posterior cingulate have dissociable functions in recognition memory that vary with familiarity, and that the cerebellum may serve as the co-ordinator of all four types of recognition memory processes.
为了一方面识别与单词和面孔识别记忆相关的相对特定脑区,另一方面识别两者共有的脑区,我们使用[H215O]PET对健康志愿者进行了与识别记忆的不同认知任务相关的局部脑血流量检查。任务包括在两种条件(新奇和熟悉)下识别两种类型的刺激(面孔和单词),以及两个基线任务(阅读单词和性别分类)。用于识别特定脑区的统计分析包括三次减法:新奇单词减去新奇面孔、熟悉单词减去熟悉面孔、阅读单词减去性别分类。这些分析揭示了在特定熟悉程度水平下用于识别单词和识别面孔的脑回路中的相对差异。为了找到面孔和单词识别共有的脑区,我们确定了四次减法(新奇单词减去阅读单词、新奇面孔减去性别分类、熟悉单词减去阅读单词、熟悉面孔减去性别分类)中的重叠区域。结果表明,单词识别中的激活位点倾向于定位于左半球,并分布为许多小位点,尤其包括左颞中回和颞下回的后部。这些区域可能与书面单词识别过程中的词汇检索有关。相比之下,面孔识别的激活区域倾向于定位于右半球,并位于一个大的聚集区域,包括右舌回和梭状回。这些发现表明,在单词和面孔的识别记忆过程中,参与的神经通路明显不同,其中语义提示和感知负荷分别在辨别中起关键作用。此外,对单词和面孔识别共有的脑区的研究表明,前扣带回和后扣带回在识别记忆中具有随熟悉程度而变化的可分离功能,并且小脑可能作为所有四种类型识别记忆过程的协调者。