Sutherland Robert J
Department of Neuroscience, The University of Lethbridge, 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, AB Canada, T1K 3M4.
Behav Neurosci. 2010 Jun;124(3):434-6. doi: 10.1037/a0019614.
The article by Goodrich-Hunsaker and Hopkins (2010, this issue) takes up an important place among in the recent contributions on the role of the hippocampus in memory. They evaluate the effect of bilateral damage to the hippocampus on performance by human participants in a virtual 8-arm radial maze. The hippocampal damage appears to be highly selective and nearly complete. Exactly as with selective hippocampal damage in rats, the human participants showed a deficit in accurately choosing rewarded versus never-rewarded arms and a deficit in avoiding reentering recently visited arms. The results are triply significant: (1) They provide good support for the idea that the wealth of neurobiological information, from network to synapse to gene, on spatial memory in the rat may apply as a whole to the human hippocampal memory system; (2) They affirm the utility of human virtual task models of rat spatial memory tasks; (3) They support one interpretation of the dampening of the hippocampal functional MRI (fMRI) blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal during performance of the virtual radial arm maze observed by Astur et al. (2005).
古德里奇 - 洪萨克和霍普金斯(2010年,本期)撰写的文章在近期有关海马体在记忆中作用的研究贡献中占据重要地位。他们评估了海马体双侧损伤对人类参与者在虚拟八臂放射状迷宫中表现的影响。海马体损伤似乎具有高度选择性且近乎完全。与大鼠的选择性海马体损伤情况完全一样,人类参与者在准确选择有奖励与无奖励臂方面存在缺陷,并且在避免重新进入近期访问过的臂方面也存在缺陷。这些结果具有三重重要意义:(1)它们为以下观点提供了有力支持,即从网络到突触再到基因的关于大鼠空间记忆的丰富神经生物学信息可能整体适用于人类海马体记忆系统;(2)它们肯定了大鼠空间记忆任务的人类虚拟任务模型的实用性;(3)它们支持了阿斯图尔等人(2005年)观察到的在虚拟放射状臂迷宫任务执行过程中海马体功能磁共振成像(fMRI)血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号减弱的一种解释。