Spiers Hugo J, Maguire Eleanor A
Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience, Institute of Neurology, University College London, 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, UK.
Neuroimage. 2006 Jul 15;31(4):1826-40. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.01.037. Epub 2006 Apr 11.
How does the human brain allow us to interact with and navigate through a constantly changing world? Whilst controlled experiments using functional brain imaging can give insightful snapshots of neuronal responses to relatively simplified stimuli, they cannot hope to mirror the challenges faced by the brain in the real world. However, trying to study the brain mechanisms supporting daily living represents a huge challenge. By combining functional neuroimaging, an accurate interactive virtual simulation of a bustling central London (UK), and a novel means of 'reading' participants' thoughts whilst they moved around the city, we ascertained the online neural correlates underpinning navigation in this real-world context. A complex choreography of neural dynamics was revealed comprising focal and distributed, transient and sustained brain activity. Our results provide new insights into the specific roles of individual brain areas, in particular the hippocampus, retrosplenial, and frontal cortices, as well as offering clues about how functional specialisations operate within dynamic brain systems.
人类大脑是如何让我们与不断变化的世界进行互动并在其中导航的?虽然使用功能性脑成像的对照实验能够提供关于神经元对相对简化刺激的反应的深刻快照,但它们无法反映大脑在现实世界中所面临的挑战。然而,试图研究支持日常生活的大脑机制是一项巨大的挑战。通过结合功能性神经成像、对英国伦敦市中心繁华景象的精确交互式虚拟模拟,以及一种在参与者在城市中移动时“读取”他们想法的新方法,我们确定了在这种现实世界背景下支撑导航的在线神经关联。结果揭示了一种复杂的神经动力学编排,包括局部和分布式、短暂和持续的大脑活动。我们的研究结果为各个脑区,特别是海马体、压后皮质和额叶皮质的具体作用提供了新的见解,同时也为功能特化在动态脑系统中如何运作提供了线索。