Hermans Erno J, Battaglia Francesco P, Atsak Piray, de Voogd Lycia D, Fernández Guillén, Roozendaal Benno
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, 6500 HB, The Netherlands; Department for Cognitive Neuroscience, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, 6525 EZ, The Netherlands.
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, 6500 HB, The Netherlands; Department for Cognitive Neuroscience, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, 6525 EZ, The Netherlands; Departments for Neuroinformatics and Neurophysiology, Faculty of Science, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, 6525 AJ, The Netherlands.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2014 Jul;112:2-16. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2014.02.005. Epub 2014 Feb 28.
The amygdala has long been known to play a key role in supporting memory for emotionally arousing experiences. For example, classical fear conditioning depends on neural plasticity within this anterior medial temporal lobe region. Beneficial effects of emotional arousal on memory, however, are not restricted to simple associative learning. Our recollection of emotional experiences often includes rich representations of, e.g., spatiotemporal context, visceral states, and stimulus-response associations. Critically, such memory features are known to bear heavily on regions elsewhere in the brain. These observations led to the modulation account of amygdala function, which postulates that amygdala activation enhances memory consolidation by facilitating neural plasticity and information storage processes in its target regions. Rodent work in past decades has identified the most important brain regions and neurochemical processes involved in these modulatory actions, and neuropsychological and neuroimaging work in humans has produced a large body of convergent data. Importantly, recent methodological developments make it increasingly realistic to monitor neural interactions underlying such modulatory effects as they unfold. For instance, functional connectivity network modeling in humans has demonstrated how information exchanges between the amygdala and specific target regions occur within the context of large-scale neural network interactions. Furthermore, electrophysiological and optogenetic techniques in rodents are beginning to make it possible to quantify and even manipulate such interactions with millisecond precision. In this paper we will discuss that these developments will likely lead to an updated view of the amygdala as a critical nexus within large-scale networks supporting different aspects of memory processing for emotionally arousing experiences.
长期以来,人们都知道杏仁核在支持对情绪唤起经历的记忆方面起着关键作用。例如,经典恐惧条件反射依赖于这个前内侧颞叶区域内的神经可塑性。然而,情绪唤起对记忆的有益影响并不局限于简单的联想学习。我们对情绪经历的回忆通常包括丰富的表征,例如时空背景、内脏状态和刺激-反应关联。至关重要的是,已知这些记忆特征在很大程度上依赖于大脑其他区域。这些观察结果导致了杏仁核功能的调节学说,该学说假定杏仁核激活通过促进其目标区域的神经可塑性和信息存储过程来增强记忆巩固。过去几十年的啮齿动物研究已经确定了这些调节作用中最重要的脑区和神经化学过程,而人类的神经心理学和神经影像学研究也产生了大量趋同的数据。重要的是,最近的方法学发展使得监测这些调节作用背后的神经相互作用在其展开过程中变得越来越现实。例如,人类的功能连接网络建模已经证明了杏仁核与特定目标区域之间的信息交换是如何在大规模神经网络相互作用的背景下发生的。此外,啮齿动物的电生理和光遗传学技术开始使得以毫秒精度量化甚至操纵这种相互作用成为可能。在本文中,我们将讨论这些发展可能会导致对杏仁核的一种更新观点,即杏仁核是支持情绪唤起经历记忆处理不同方面的大规模网络中的关键枢纽。