NIMH-UCL Joint Graduate Partnership Program in Neuroscience, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2012;10(2):e1001267. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001267. Epub 2012 Feb 28.
The hippocampus is crucial for episodic or declarative memory and the theta rhythm has been implicated in mnemonic processing, but the functional contribution of theta to memory remains the subject of intense speculation. Recent evidence suggests that the hippocampus might function as a network hub for volitional learning. In contrast to human experiments, electrophysiological recordings in the hippocampus of behaving rodents are dominated by theta oscillations reflecting volitional movement, which has been linked to spatial exploration and encoding. This literature makes the surprising cross-species prediction that the human hippocampal theta rhythm supports memory by coordinating exploratory movements in the service of self-directed learning. We examined the links between theta, spatial exploration, and memory encoding by designing an interactive human spatial navigation paradigm combined with multimodal neuroimaging. We used both non-invasive whole-head Magnetoencephalography (MEG) to look at theta oscillations and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to look at brain regions associated with volitional movement and learning. We found that theta power increases during the self-initiation of virtual movement, additionally correlating with subsequent memory performance and environmental familiarity. Performance-related hippocampal theta increases were observed during a static pre-navigation retrieval phase, where planning for subsequent navigation occurred. Furthermore, periods of the task showing movement-related theta increases showed decreased fMRI activity in the parahippocampus and increased activity in the hippocampus and other brain regions that strikingly overlap with the previously observed volitional learning network (the reverse pattern was seen for stationary periods). These fMRI changes also correlated with participant's performance. Our findings suggest that the human hippocampal theta rhythm supports memory by coordinating exploratory movements in the service of self-directed learning. These findings directly extend the role of the hippocampus in spatial exploration in rodents to human memory and self-directed learning.
海马体对于情景记忆或陈述性记忆至关重要,θ节律被认为与记忆处理有关,但θ节律对记忆的功能贡献仍然是激烈推测的主题。最近的证据表明,海马体可能作为意志学习的网络枢纽发挥作用。与人类实验不同,行为大鼠海马体的电生理记录主要由反映意志运动的θ振荡主导,而这种运动与空间探索和编码有关。这一文献提出了一个跨物种的惊人预测,即人类海马体θ节律通过协调探索运动来支持记忆,以服务于自我导向学习。我们通过设计一个结合多模态神经影像学的交互式人类空间导航范式,来检验θ节律、空间探索和记忆编码之间的联系。我们使用非侵入性全头磁脑图(MEG)来观察θ振荡,以及功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来观察与意志运动和学习相关的大脑区域。我们发现,在自我发起虚拟运动期间,θ功率增加,并且与随后的记忆表现和环境熟悉度相关。在静态预导航检索阶段观察到与表现相关的海马体θ增加,在此期间发生了随后的导航规划。此外,在与运动相关的θ增加的任务期间,观察到旁海马体的 fMRI 活动减少,而海马体和其他大脑区域的活动增加,这与先前观察到的意志学习网络惊人地重叠(对于静止期则相反)。这些 fMRI 变化也与参与者的表现相关。我们的研究结果表明,人类海马体θ节律通过协调探索运动来支持记忆,以服务于自我导向学习。这些发现直接将啮齿动物中海马体在空间探索中的作用扩展到人类记忆和自我导向学习中。