Laboratoire Mémoire et Cognition, Université Paris Descartes, 71 avenue E. Vaillant, Boulogne Billancourt 92774 Cedex, France.
Curr Alzheimer Res. 2013 Dec;10(10):1107-17. doi: 10.2174/15672050113106660175.
The Self-reference effect (SRE) on long-term episodic memory and autonoetic consciousness has been investigated in young adults, scarcely in older adults, but never in Alzheimer's patients. Is the functional influence of Selfreference still present when the individual's memory and identity are impaired? We investigated this issue in 60 young subjects, 41 elderly subjects, and 28 patients with Alzheimer's disease, by using 1) an incidental learning task of personality traits in three encoding conditions, inducing variable degrees of depth of processing and personal involvement, 2) a 2- minute retention interval free recall task, and 3) a 20-minute delayed recognition task, combined with a remember-know paradigm. Each recorded score was corrected for errors (intrusions in free recall, false alarms in recognition, and false source memory in remember responses). Compared with alternative encodings, the Self-reference significantly enhanced performance on the free recall task in the young group, and on the recognition task both in the young and older groups but not in the Alzheimer group. The most important finding in the Alzheimer group is that the Self-reference led the most often to a subjective sense of remembering (especially for the positive words) with the retrieval of the correct encoding source. This Self-reference recollection effect in patients was related to independent subjective measures of a positive and definite sense of Self (measured by the Tennessee Self Concept Scale), and to memory complaints in daily life. In conclusion, these results demonstrated the power and robustness of the Self-reference effect on recollection in long-term episodic memory in Alzheimer's disease, albeit the retrieval is considerably reduced. These results should open new perspectives for the development of rehabilitation programs for memory deficits.
自我参照效应(SRE)对长期情景记忆和自主意识的影响已在年轻人中进行了研究,在老年人中很少研究,但从未在阿尔茨海默病患者中研究过。当个体的记忆和身份受损时,自我参照的功能影响是否仍然存在?我们通过以下方式在 60 名年轻受试者、41 名老年受试者和 28 名阿尔茨海默病患者中研究了这个问题:1)在三种编码条件下进行人格特质的偶然学习任务,诱导不同程度的加工深度和个人参与度;2)在无 2 分钟保留间隔的自由回忆任务;3)在结合了记住-知道范式的 20 分钟延迟识别任务。记录的每个分数都经过了错误校正(自由回忆中的错误、识别中的错误警报和记住反应中的错误来源记忆)。与替代编码相比,自我参照在年轻组的自由回忆任务中显著提高了表现,在年轻组和老年组的识别任务中也显著提高了表现,但在阿尔茨海默组中没有提高。在阿尔茨海默病组中最重要的发现是,自我参照最常导致主观记忆感(特别是对积极的词),并检索到正确的编码来源。患者的这种自我参照回忆效应与独立的积极和明确的自我主观测量(由田纳西自我概念量表测量)以及日常生活中的记忆抱怨有关。总之,这些结果表明,自我参照效应在阿尔茨海默病的长期情景记忆中对回忆具有强大而稳健的作用,尽管检索能力大大降低。这些结果应为记忆缺陷康复计划的发展开辟新的视角。