Baxter M G, Murray E A
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA.
Hippocampus. 2001;11(1):61-71. doi: 10.1002/1098-1063(2001)11:1<61::AID-HIPO1021>3.0.CO;2-Z.
Three recent studies in macaque monkeys that examined the effects on memory of restricted hippocampal lesions (Murray and Mishkin, J Neurosci 1998;18:6568-6582; Beason-Held et al., Hippocampus 1999;9:562-574; Zola et al., J Neurosci 2000;20:451-463) differed in their conclusions about the involvement of the hippocampus in recognition memory. Because these experiments used a common behavioral procedure, trial-unique visual delayed nonmatching-to-sample (DNMS), a quantitative synthesis ("meta-analysis") was performed to determine whether hippocampal lesions produced a reliable net impairment in DNMS performance, and whether this impairment was related to the magnitude of hippocampal damage. A similar analysis was performed on data from monkeys with perirhinal or rhinal cortex damage (Meunier et al., J Neurosci 1993;13:5418-5432; Buffalo et al., Learn Mem 1999;6:572-599). DNMS performance scores were transformed to d' values to permit comparisons across studies, and a loss in d' score, a measure of the magnitude of the recognition deficit relative to the control group, was calculated for each operated monkey. Two main findings emerged. First, the loss in d' following hippocampal damage was reliably larger than zero, but was smaller than that found after lesions limited to the perirhinal cortex. Second, the correlation of loss in d' with extent of hippocampal damage was large and negative, indicating that greater impairments were associated with smaller hippocampal lesions. This relationship was opposite to that between loss in d' and rhinal cortex damage, for which larger lesions were associated with greater impairment. These findings indicate that damage to the hippocampus and to the rhinal cortex affects recognition memory in different ways. Furthermore, they provide a framework for understanding the seemingly disparate effects of hippocampal damage on recognition memory in monkeys, and by extension, for interpreting the conflicting reports on the effects of such damage on recognition memory abilities in amnesic humans.
最近对猕猴进行的三项研究,探讨了局限性海马损伤对记忆的影响(默里和米什金,《神经科学杂志》1998年;18:6568 - 6582;比森 - 赫尔德等人,《海马体》1999年;9:562 - 574;佐拉等人,《神经科学杂志》2000年;20:451 - 463),在海马体参与识别记忆方面得出了不同结论。由于这些实验采用了共同的行为程序,即每次试验呈现独特视觉刺激的延迟非匹配样本任务(DNMS),因此进行了定量综合分析(“元分析”),以确定海马损伤是否会在DNMS表现中产生可靠的净损伤,以及这种损伤是否与海马损伤的程度相关。对患有嗅周或嗅皮质损伤的猴子的数据进行了类似分析(默尼耶等人,《神经科学杂志》1993年;13:5418 - 5432;布法罗等人,《学习与记忆》1999年;6:572 - 599)。将DNMS表现分数转换为d'值以便跨研究进行比较,并为每只手术猴子计算d'分数的损失,d'分数损失衡量相对于对照组识别缺陷的程度。出现了两个主要发现。首先,海马损伤后d'的损失确实大于零,但小于仅限于嗅周皮质损伤后的损失。其次,d'损失与海马损伤程度的相关性很大且为负,表明损伤越大,海马损伤越小。这种关系与d'损失和嗅皮质损伤之间的关系相反,嗅皮质损伤越大,损伤越严重。这些发现表明,海马体和嗅皮质损伤以不同方式影响识别记忆。此外,它们为理解海马损伤对猴子识别记忆看似不同的影响提供了一个框架,进而为解释关于这种损伤对失忆人类识别记忆能力影响的相互矛盾的报告提供了框架。