Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2013 Aug;51(9):1699-708. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2013.06.001. Epub 2013 Jun 8.
Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that prototype learning may be mediated by at least two dissociable memory systems depending on the mode of acquisition, with A/Not-A prototype learning dependent upon a perceptual representation system located within posterior visual cortex and A/B prototype learning dependent upon a declarative memory system associated with medial temporal and frontal regions. The degree to which patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) can acquire new categorical information may therefore critically depend upon the mode of acquisition. The present study examined A/Not-A and A/B prototype learning in AD patients using procedures that allowed direct comparison of learning across tasks. Despite impaired explicit recall of category features in all tasks, patients showed differential patterns of category acquisition across tasks. First, AD patients demonstrated impaired prototype induction along with intact exemplar classification under incidental A/Not-A conditions, suggesting that the loss of functional connectivity within visual cortical areas disrupted the integration processes supporting prototype induction within the perceptual representation system. Second, AD patients demonstrated intact prototype induction but impaired exemplar classification during A/B learning under observational conditions, suggesting that this form of prototype learning is dependent on a declarative memory system that is disrupted in AD. Third, the surprisingly intact classification of both prototypes and exemplars during A/B learning under trial-and-error feedback conditions suggests that AD patients shifted control from their deficient declarative memory system to a feedback-dependent procedural memory system when training conditions allowed. Taken together, these findings serve to not only increase our understanding of category learning in AD, but to also provide new insights into the ways in which different memory systems interact to support the acquisition of categorical knowledge.
最近的神经影像学研究表明,原型学习可能至少由两个可分离的记忆系统介导,具体取决于获取模式,其中 A/非 A 原型学习依赖于位于后视觉皮层内的感知表示系统,而 A/B 原型学习依赖于与内侧颞叶和额叶区域相关的陈述性记忆系统。因此,阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者获得新的类别信息的程度可能严重依赖于获取模式。本研究使用允许直接比较跨任务学习的程序,检查了 AD 患者的 A/非 A 和 A/B 原型学习。尽管在所有任务中对类别特征的明确回忆受损,但患者在跨任务中表现出不同的类别获取模式。首先,AD 患者在偶然的 A/非 A 条件下表现出原型诱导受损和示例分类完好,这表明视觉皮层区域内功能连接的丧失破坏了支持感知表示系统内原型诱导的整合过程。其次,AD 患者在观察条件下的 A/B 学习中表现出原型诱导完好但示例分类受损,这表明这种形式的原型学习依赖于在 AD 中受损的陈述性记忆系统。第三,在试错反馈条件下的 A/B 学习中,原型和示例的分类都令人惊讶地完好无损,这表明 AD 患者在允许训练条件下将控制从其缺陷性陈述性记忆系统转移到依赖反馈的程序性记忆系统。综上所述,这些发现不仅增加了我们对 AD 中类别学习的理解,而且还为不同记忆系统相互作用以支持类别知识获取的方式提供了新的见解。