Department of Neurology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee; Department of Psychiatry, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee; Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.
Hippocampus. 2013 Dec;23(12):1246-58. doi: 10.1002/hipo.22162. Epub 2013 Aug 14.
Over the past four decades, the characterization of memory loss associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been extensively debated. Recent iterations have focused on disordered encoding versus rapid forgetting. To address this issue, we used a behavioral pattern separation task to assess the ability of the hippocampus to create and maintain distinct and orthogonalized visual memory representations in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and mild AD. We specifically used a lag-based continuous recognition paradigm to determine whether patients with aMCI and mild AD fail to encode visual memory representations or whether these patients properly encode representations that are rapidly forgotten. Consistent with the rapid forgetting hypothesis of AD, we found that patients with aMCI demonstrated decreasing pattern separation rates as the lag of interfering objects increased. In contrast, patients with AD demonstrated consistently poor pattern separation rates across three increasingly longer lags. We propose a continuum that reflects underlying hippocampal neuropathology whereby patients with aMCI are able to properly encode information into memory but rapidly lose these memory representations, and patients with AD, who have extensive hippocampal and parahippocampal damage, cannot properly encode information in distinct, orthogonal representations. Our results also revealed that whereas patients with aMCI demonstrated similar behavioral pattern completion rates to healthy older adults, patients with AD showed lower pattern completion rates when we corrected for response bias. Finally, these behavioral pattern separation and pattern completion results are discussed in terms of the dual process model of recognition memory.
在过去的四十年中,阿尔茨海默病(AD)相关记忆丧失的特征一直存在广泛争议。最近的研究重点集中在编码紊乱与快速遗忘上。为了解决这个问题,我们使用了一种行为模式分离任务来评估海马体在遗忘型轻度认知障碍(aMCI)和轻度 AD 患者中创建和维持独特且正交视觉记忆表现的能力。我们特别使用基于滞后的连续识别范式来确定 aMCI 和轻度 AD 患者是否无法编码视觉记忆表现,或者这些患者是否正确编码了会迅速遗忘的表现。与 AD 的快速遗忘假说一致,我们发现,随着干扰物体滞后的增加,aMCI 患者的模式分离率逐渐降低。相比之下,AD 患者在三个越来越长的滞后中表现出一致的较差模式分离率。我们提出了一个连续体,反映了潜在的海马神经病理学,即 aMCI 患者能够将信息正确地编码到记忆中,但会迅速失去这些记忆表现,而 AD 患者则有广泛的海马和海马旁区损伤,无法以独特、正交的表现形式正确地编码信息。我们的结果还表明,尽管 aMCI 患者的行为模式完成率与健康老年人相似,但当我们纠正反应偏差时,AD 患者的模式完成率较低。最后,这些行为模式分离和模式完成的结果是根据识别记忆的双过程模型进行讨论的。