Smith Christine N, Hopkins Ramona O, Squire Larry R
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
J Neurosci. 2006 Nov 1;26(44):11304-12. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3071-06.2006.
We asked what kind of memory is operating when eye movements change as the result of experience. Participants viewed scenes that were either novel, repeated, or manipulated (i.e., a change was introduced in one region of the scene). Eye movements differed depending on the past viewing history of each scene. Participants made fewer fixations and sampled fewer regions when scenes were repeated than when scenes were novel. When scenes were altered, participants made more fixations in the altered region, spent more time looking at the altered region, and made more transitions into and out of the altered region than in unchanged (matched) regions in the repeated scenes. Importantly, these effects occurred only when individuals were aware that a change had occurred. Participants who were unaware that the scene had been altered looked at the changed scenes in the same way that they looked at repeated scenes. Thus, there was no indication that eye movements could reveal an unaware (unconscious) form of memory. Instead, eye movements reflected conscious memory of whether the scene was repeated or manipulated. The findings were the same when awareness was assessed after viewing all the scenes (experiment 1) and when awareness was assessed after each scene was presented (experiment 2). In experiment 3, memory-impaired patients with damage limited to the hippocampus were impaired at deciding whether scenes were novel, repeated, or manipulated. Thus, the ability to consciously recollect recent encounters with scenes reflects a form of hippocampus-dependent memory. The findings show that experience-dependent eye movements in response to altered scenes reflect conscious, declarative memory, and they support the link between aware memory, declarative memory, and hippocampus-dependent memory.
我们探讨了当眼动因经验而改变时,是何种记忆在起作用。参与者观看了新颖、重复或经过处理的场景(即场景的一个区域被改变)。眼动因每个场景的过往观看历史而有所不同。与新颖场景相比,当场景重复时,参与者的注视次数减少,注视的区域也更少。当场景被改变时,与重复场景中未改变(匹配)的区域相比,参与者在改变区域的注视次数更多,在该区域花费的注视时间更长,进出该区域的转换次数也更多。重要的是,这些效应仅在个体意识到发生了变化时才会出现。未意识到场景已被改变的参与者,观看改变后的场景的方式与观看重复场景的方式相同。因此,没有迹象表明眼动能揭示一种未被意识到(无意识)的记忆形式。相反,眼动反映了对场景是被重复还是被处理的有意识记忆。当在观看所有场景后评估意识(实验1)以及在呈现每个场景后评估意识(实验2)时,结果是相同的。在实验3中,海马体受损的记忆障碍患者在判断场景是新颖、重复还是经过处理时存在障碍。因此,有意识地回忆近期与场景的接触的能力反映了一种依赖海马体的记忆形式。研究结果表明,对改变后的场景的依赖经验的眼动反映了有意识的陈述性记忆,并且支持了有意识记忆、陈述性记忆和依赖海马体的记忆之间的联系。