Centre de recherche en neuropsychologie et cognition, Département de psychologie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Neuroimage. 2010 Dec;53(4):1334-45. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.07.027. Epub 2010 Jul 16.
Previous functional neuroimaging studies have shown that maintenance of centrally presented objects in visual short-term memory (VSTM) leads to bilateral increases of BOLD activations in IPS/IOS cortex, while prior electrophysiological work suggests that maintaining stimuli encoded from a single hemifield leads to a sustained posterior contralateral negativity (SPCN) in electrophysiology and magnetoencephalography. These two findings have never been investigated using the same physiological measures. We recorded the BOLD response using fMRI, magnetoencephalography (MEG), and electrophysiology (EEG), while subjects encoded visual stimuli from a single hemifield of a balanced display. The EEG showed an SPCN. However, no SPCN-like activation was observed in the BOLD signals. The BOLD response in parietal cortex remained bilateral, even after unilateral encoding of the stimuli, but MEG showed both bilateral and contralateral activations, each likely reflecting a sub portion of the neuronal populations participating in the maintenance of information in VSTM. Contrary to the assumption that BOLD, EEG, and MEG responses - that were each linked to the maintenance of information in VSTM - are markers of the same neuronal processes, our findings suggest that each technique reveals a somewhat distinct but overlapping neural signature of the mechanisms supporting visual short-term memory.
先前的功能神经影像学研究表明,在视觉短期记忆(VSTM)中维持中央呈现的物体,会导致 IPS/IOS 皮层的双侧 BOLD 激活增加,而之前的电生理学工作表明,维持从单个半视野编码的刺激会导致电生理学和脑磁图中的持续对侧后负性(SPCN)。这两个发现从未使用相同的生理测量进行过研究。我们使用 fMRI、脑磁图(MEG)和脑电图(EEG)记录了 BOLD 反应,同时受试者从平衡显示器的单个半视野中编码视觉刺激。EEG 显示出 SPCN。然而,在 BOLD 信号中没有观察到类似 SPCN 的激活。顶叶皮层的 BOLD 反应仍然是双侧的,即使在单侧刺激编码后也是如此,但 MEG 显示出双侧和对侧的激活,每个激活可能反映了参与 VSTM 信息维持的神经元群体的一部分。与 BOLD、EEG 和 MEG 反应——每个反应都与 VSTM 中的信息维持有关——是同一神经元过程的标志物的假设相反,我们的发现表明,每种技术都揭示了支持视觉短期记忆的机制的一种略有不同但重叠的神经特征。