Yovel Galit, Paller Ken A
Department of Psychology and Institute for Neuroscience, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208-2710, USA.
Neuroimage. 2004 Feb;21(2):789-800. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2003.09.034.
A common distinction in contemporary research on episodic memory is between familiarity, an unsubstantiated impression that an event was experienced previously, and recollection, remembering some information plus the spatiotemporal context of the episode in which it was acquired. The epitome of pure familiarity--the butcher-on-the-bus phenomenon--occurs when one believes that a person is familiar (often upon seeing their face in an atypical context) while failing to recall any information about that person whatsoever. Prior research on familiarity and recollection has relied on verbal material. Whereas word meanings and pronunciations are well learned in advance, here we produced pure familiarity and recollection using photographs of faces never seen before the experiment. When participants recognized a face, recollection was inferred if they also remembered either the occupation associated with that face earlier in the experiment or any other episodic detail. Pure familiarity was inferred when recognition occurred in the absence of any such contextual retrieval. Analyses of brain potentials recorded during initial encoding showed that right-sided neural activity predicted subsequent face familiarity, whereas bilateral potentials predicted subsequent face recollection. Results during memory testing were inconsistent with the popular idea that familiarity is generically indexed by reduced frontal N400-like potentials. Instead, both memory experiences were associated with bilateral, parietal-maximum brain potentials, although with smaller amplitudes and for a shorter duration for familiarity. These similarities between electrophysiological correlates of pure familiarity and recollection suggest that familiarity with faces may arise by virtue of a subset of the neural processing responsible for recollection.
当代情景记忆研究中的一个常见区别是熟悉感和回忆之间的区别。熟悉感是一种未经证实的印象,即认为某个事件以前经历过;而回忆则是记住一些信息以及获取该信息的情景的时空背景。纯粹熟悉感的典型例子——“公交车上的屠夫”现象——发生在一个人认为某个人面熟(通常是在非典型情境中看到其面孔时),却完全想不起关于那个人的任何信息的时候。先前关于熟悉感和回忆的研究依赖于言语材料。虽然单词的含义和发音事先已经学得很好,但在这里,我们使用实验前从未见过的面孔照片来产生纯粹的熟悉感和回忆。当参与者识别出一张面孔时,如果他们还能记起在实验早期与那张面孔相关的职业或任何其他情景细节,就推断为回忆。当在没有任何此类情境检索的情况下发生识别时,则推断为纯粹熟悉感。对初始编码期间记录的脑电活动的分析表明,右侧神经活动预测随后的面孔熟悉感,而双侧电位预测随后的面孔回忆。记忆测试的结果与一种流行观点不一致,该观点认为熟悉感一般由额叶类似N400的电位降低来索引。相反,两种记忆体验都与双侧顶叶最大脑电位相关,尽管熟悉感的脑电位幅度较小且持续时间较短。纯粹熟悉感和回忆的电生理相关性之间的这些相似之处表明,对面孔的熟悉感可能是由负责回忆的神经处理的一个子集产生的。