School of Psychology, Cognition Institute, University of Plymouth Plymouth, UK ; Massachusetts General Hospital, Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging Charlestown, MA, USA ; Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical School Boston, MA, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2013 Jan 24;6:354. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00354. eCollection 2012.
Electrophysiology-based concealed information tests (CIT) try to determine whether somebody possesses concealed information about a crime-related item (probe) by comparing event-related potentials (ERPs) between this item and comparison items (irrelevants). Although the broader field is sometimes referred to as "memory detection," little attention has been paid to the precise type of underlying memory involved. This study begins addressing this issue by examining the key distinction between semantic and episodic memory in the autobiographical domain within a CIT paradigm. This study also addresses the issue of whether multiple repetitions of the items over the course of the session habituate the brain responses. Participants were tested in a 3-stimulus CIT with semantic autobiographical probes (their own date of birth) and episodic autobiographical probes (a secret date learned just before the study). Results dissociated these two memory conditions on several ERP components. Semantic probes elicited a smaller frontal N2 than episodic probes, consistent with the idea that the frontal N2 decreases with greater pre-existing knowledge about the item. Likewise, semantic probes elicited a smaller central N400 than episodic probes. Semantic probes also elicited a larger P3b than episodic probes because of their richer meaning. In contrast, episodic probes elicited a larger late positive complex (LPC) than semantic probes, because of the recent episodic memory associated with them. All these ERPs showed a difference between probes and irrelevants in both memory conditions, except for the N400, which showed a difference only in the semantic condition. Finally, although repetition affected the ERPs, it did not reduce the difference between probes and irrelevants. These findings show that the type of memory associated with a probe has both theoretical and practical importance for CIT research.
基于电生理学的隐藏信息测试(CIT)试图通过比较与犯罪相关物品(探针)和比较物品(无关项)相关的事件相关电位(ERP)来确定某人是否拥有关于该物品的隐藏信息。尽管更广泛的领域有时被称为“记忆检测”,但很少关注所涉及的记忆的确切类型。本研究通过在 CIT 范式中检查自传体领域的语义记忆和情景记忆之间的关键区别来开始解决这个问题。本研究还探讨了在整个会议过程中多次重复项目是否会使大脑反应习惯化的问题。参与者在 3 刺激 CIT 中接受测试,使用语义自传体探针(自己的出生日期)和情景自传体探针(在研究前刚刚学习的秘密日期)。结果在几个 ERP 成分上区分了这两种记忆条件。语义探针比情景探针诱发的额 N2 更小,这与额 N2 随着对项目的预先存在的知识增加而减少的观点一致。同样,语义探针比情景探针诱发的中央 N400 更小。语义探针也比情景探针诱发更大的 P3b,因为它们的意义更丰富。相比之下,由于与它们相关的最近情景记忆,情景探针比语义探针诱发更大的晚正复合(LPC)。所有这些 ERP 在两种记忆条件下都显示了探针和无关项之间的差异,除了 N400,它仅在语义条件下显示了差异。最后,尽管重复影响了 ERP,但它并没有减少探针和无关项之间的差异。这些发现表明,与探针相关的记忆类型对 CIT 研究具有理论和实际重要性。