Law Jon R, Flanery Marci A, Wirth Sylvia, Yanike Marianna, Smith Anne C, Frank Loren M, Suzuki Wendy A, Brown Emery N, Stark Craig E L
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA.
J Neurosci. 2005 Jun 15;25(24):5720-9. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4935-04.2005.
Recent neurophysiological findings from the monkey hippocampus showed dramatic changes in the firing rate of individual hippocampal cells as a function of learning new associations. To extend these findings to humans, we used blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine the patterns of brain activity during learning of an analogous associative task. We observed bilateral, monotonic increases in activity during learning not only in the hippocampus but also in the parahippocampal and right perirhinal cortices. In addition, activity related to simple novelty signals was observed throughout the medial temporal lobe (MTL) memory system and in several frontal regions. A contrasting pattern was observed in a frontoparietal network in which a high level of activity was sustained until the association was well learned, at which point the activity decreased to baseline. Thus, we found that associative learning in humans is accompanied by striking increases in BOLD fMRI activity throughout the MTL as well as in the cingulate cortex and frontal lobe, consistent with neurophysiological findings in the monkey hippocampus. The finding that both the hippocampus and surrounding MTL cortex exhibited similar associative learning and novelty signals argues strongly against the view that there is a clear division of labor in the MTL in which the hippocampus is essential for forming associations and the cortex is involved in novelty detection. A second experiment addressed a striking aspect of the data from the first experiment by demonstrating a substantial effect of baseline task difficulty on MTL activity capable of rendering mnemonic activity as either "positive" or "negative."
近期来自猴子海马体的神经生理学研究结果表明,随着新关联学习的进行,单个海马体细胞的放电频率发生了显著变化。为了将这些发现扩展到人类,我们使用血氧水平依赖(BOLD)功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来检查在学习类似关联任务期间的大脑活动模式。我们观察到,在学习过程中,不仅海马体,而且海马旁和右侧嗅周皮质的活动都呈现双侧单调增加。此外,在整个内侧颞叶(MTL)记忆系统和几个额叶区域都观察到了与简单新奇信号相关的活动。在一个额顶叶网络中观察到了一种对比模式,在该网络中,高水平的活动一直持续到关联被很好地学习,此时活动降至基线水平。因此,我们发现人类的关联学习伴随着整个MTL以及扣带回皮质和额叶中BOLD fMRI活动的显著增加,这与猴子海马体的神经生理学研究结果一致。海马体和周围MTL皮质都表现出类似的关联学习和新奇信号这一发现,有力地反驳了MTL存在明确分工的观点,即海马体对于形成关联至关重要,而皮质参与新奇性检测。第二个实验通过证明基线任务难度对MTL活动有实质性影响,这种影响能够使记忆活动表现为“正向”或“负向”,解决了第一个实验数据中一个引人注目的方面。