Henson R N A, Shallice T, Gorno-Tempini M L, Dolan R J
Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, University College London, 17 Queen Square, London WC1N 3AR, UK.
Cereb Cortex. 2002 Feb;12(2):178-86. doi: 10.1093/cercor/12.2.178.
Recent parallels between neurophysiological and neuroimaging findings suggest that repeated stimulus processing produces decreased responses in brain regions associated with that processing--a 'repetition suppression' effect. In the present study, volunteers performed two tasks on repeated presentation of famous and unfamiliar faces during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In the implicit task, they made fame-judgements (regardless of repetition); in the explicit task, they made episodic recognition judgements (regardless of familiarity). Only in the implicit task was repetition suppression observed: for famous faces in a right lateral fusiform region, and for both famous and unfamiliar faces in a left inferior occipital region. Repetition suppression is therefore not an automatic consequence of repeated perceptual processing of stimuli.
近期神经生理学和神经影像学研究结果之间的相似之处表明,重复刺激处理会使与该处理相关的脑区反应减弱——即“重复抑制”效应。在本研究中,志愿者在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)期间对著名面孔和不熟悉面孔的重复呈现执行了两项任务。在隐性任务中,他们进行知名度判断(无论是否重复);在显性任务中,他们进行情景识别判断(无论是否熟悉)。仅在隐性任务中观察到了重复抑制:右侧梭状回区域的著名面孔,以及左侧枕下区域的著名面孔和不熟悉面孔。因此,重复抑制并非刺激重复感知处理的自动结果。