Genon Sarah, Bahri Mohamed Ali, Collette Fabienne, Angel Lucie, d'Argembeau Arnaud, Clarys David, Kalenzaga Sandrine, Salmon Eric, Bastin Christine
Cyclotron Research Centre, University of Liège, Belgium.
Cyclotron Research Centre, University of Liège, Belgium.
Cortex. 2014 Feb;51:11-24. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2013.06.009. Epub 2013 Jul 2.
In human cognition, self and memory processes strongly interact, as evidenced by the memory advantage for self-referential materials [Self-Reference Effect (SRE) and Self-Reference Recollection Effect (SRRE)]. The current study examined this interaction at the behavioural level and its neural correlates in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Healthy older controls (HC) and AD patients performed trait-adjectives judgements either for self-relevance or for other-relevance (encoding phase). In a first experiment, the encoding and subsequent yes-no recognition phases were administrated in a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scanner. Brain activation as measured by functional MRI (fMRI) was examined during self-relevance judgements and anatomical images were used to search for correlation between the memory advantage for self-related items and grey matter density (GMD). In a second experiment, participants described the retrieval experience that had driven their recognition decisions (familiarity vs recollective experience). The behavioural results revealed that the SRE and SRRE were impaired in AD patients compared to HC participants. Furthermore, verbal reports revealed that the retrieval of self-related information was preferentially associated with the retrieval of contextual details, such as source memory in the HC participants, but less so in the AD patients. Our imaging findings revealed that both groups activated the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) at encoding during self-relevance judgements. However, the variable and limited memory advantage for self-related information was associated with GMD in the lateral prefrontal cortex in the AD patients, a region supporting high-order processes linking self and memory. These findings suggest that even if AD patients engage MPFC during self-referential judgements, the retrieval of self-related memories is qualitatively and quantitatively impaired in relation with altered high-order processes in the lateral PFC.
在人类认知中,自我与记忆过程紧密相互作用,自我参照材料的记忆优势[自我参照效应(SRE)和自我参照回忆效应(SRRE)]就证明了这一点。本研究在行为层面考察了这种相互作用及其在阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者中的神经关联。健康老年对照组(HC)和AD患者对特质形容词进行自我相关性或其他相关性判断(编码阶段)。在第一个实验中,编码及随后的是/否识别阶段在磁共振成像(MRI)扫描仪中进行。在自我相关性判断期间,通过功能磁共振成像(fMRI)测量脑激活,并使用解剖图像来寻找自我相关项目的记忆优势与灰质密度(GMD)之间的相关性。在第二个实验中,参与者描述了驱动其识别决策的检索体验(熟悉度与回忆体验)。行为结果显示,与HC参与者相比,AD患者的SRE和SRRE受损。此外,言语报告显示,自我相关信息的检索在HC参与者中优先与情境细节的检索相关,如源记忆,但在AD患者中则不然。我们的成像结果显示,两组在自我相关性判断的编码过程中均激活了内侧前额叶皮层(MPFC)。然而,AD患者中自我相关信息的可变且有限的记忆优势与外侧前额叶皮层的GMD相关,该区域支持连接自我与记忆的高阶过程。这些发现表明,即使AD患者在自我参照判断过程中激活了MPFC,但与外侧前额叶皮层中改变的高阶过程相关,自我相关记忆的检索在质量和数量上均受损。