CI-NAPS, UMR 6232, CNRS, CEA, Université de Caen, Caen, France.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2010 Jul;31(7):1065-75. doi: 10.1002/hbm.20917.
Despite the increasing use of virtual reality, the impact on cerebral representation of topographical knowledge of learning by virtual reality rather than by actual locomotion has never been investigated. To tackle this challenging issue, we conducted an experiment wherein participants learned an immersive virtual environment using a joystick. The following day, participants' brain activity was monitored by functional magnetic resonance imaging while they mentally estimated distances in this environment. Results were compared with that of participants performing the same task but having learned the real version of the environment by actual walking. We detected a large set of areas shared by both groups including the parieto-frontal areas and the parahippocampal gyrus. More importantly, although participants of both groups performed the same mental task and exhibited similar behavioral performances, they differed at the brain activity level. Unlike real learners, virtual learners activated a left-lateralized network associated with tool manipulation and action semantics. This demonstrated that a neural fingerprint distinguishing virtual from real learning persists when subjects use a mental representation of the learnt environment with equivalent performances.
尽管虚拟现实的使用越来越多,但通过虚拟现实而不是实际运动来学习地形知识对大脑表征的影响从未被研究过。为了解决这个具有挑战性的问题,我们进行了一项实验,参与者使用操纵杆学习沉浸式虚拟环境。第二天,当参与者在这个环境中进行心理距离估计时,通过功能磁共振成像监测他们的大脑活动。将结果与使用实际行走学习真实环境的参与者进行比较。我们检测到两组参与者共享的一组大面积区域,包括顶叶-额叶区域和海马旁回。更重要的是,尽管两组参与者执行相同的心理任务并表现出相似的行为表现,但他们在大脑活动水平上存在差异。与真实学习者不同,虚拟学习者激活了与工具操作和动作语义相关的左侧网络。这表明,当受试者使用学习环境的心理表示并表现出等效的性能时,区分虚拟和真实学习的神经指纹仍然存在。