Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, Institute of Neurology, University College London, 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, UK.
Neuropsychologia. 2010 Apr;48(5):1501-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2010.01.022. Epub 2010 Feb 2.
Reliving past events and imagining potential future events engages a well-established "core" network of brain areas. How the brain constructs, or reconstructs, these experiences or scenes has been debated extensively in the literature, but remains poorly understood. Here we designed a novel task to investigate this (re)constructive process by directly exploring how naturalistic scenes are built up from their individual elements. We "slowed-down" the construction process through the use of auditorily presented phrases describing single scene elements in a serial manner. Participants were required to integrate these elements (ranging from three to six in number) together in their imagination to form a naturalistic scene. We identified three distinct sub-networks of brain areas, each with different fMRI BOLD response profiles, favouring specific points in the scene construction process. Areas including the hippocampus and retrosplenial cortex had a biphasic profile, activating when a single scene element was imagined and when 3 elements were combined together; regions including the intra-parietal sulcus and angular gyrus steadily increased activity from 1 to 3 elements; while activity in areas such as lateral prefrontal cortex was observed from the second element onwards. Activity in these sub-networks did not increase further when integrating more than three elements. Participants confirmed that three elements were sufficient to construct a coherent and vivid scene, and once this was achieved, the addition of further elements only involved maintenance or small changes to that established scene. This task offers a potentially useful tool for breaking down scene construction, a process that may be key to a range of cognitive functions such as episodic memory, future thinking and navigation.
重新体验过去的事件和想象潜在的未来事件涉及到一个成熟的“核心”大脑区域网络。大脑如何构建或重构这些经历或场景,在文献中已经进行了广泛的讨论,但仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们设计了一项新的任务,通过直接探索自然场景如何由其单个元素构建来研究这个(重构)过程。我们通过以连续的方式使用听觉呈现的短语来描述单个场景元素,从而“减缓”构建过程。参与者需要在想象中将这些元素(数量从三个到六个不等)组合在一起,形成一个自然场景。我们确定了三个不同的大脑区域子网络,每个子网络都有不同的 fMRI BOLD 响应特征,有利于场景构建过程中的特定点。包括海马体和后扣带回皮层在内的区域具有双相特征,当想象单个场景元素和组合三个元素时都会激活;包括内顶叶回和角回在内的区域的活动从一个元素稳定增加到三个元素;而外侧前额叶皮层等区域的活动则从第二个元素开始观察到。当整合超过三个元素时,这些子网络的活动不会进一步增加。参与者证实,三个元素足以构建一个连贯而生动的场景,一旦达到这一点,添加更多元素只会涉及到对已建立场景的维护或小的改变。这项任务提供了一种分解场景构建的潜在有用工具,这个过程可能是一系列认知功能的关键,如情景记忆、未来思维和导航。