Lewis-Peacock Jarrod A, Norman Kenneth A
Department of Psychology and Imaging Research Center, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, USA.
Department of Psychology and Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA.
Nat Commun. 2014 Dec 18;5:5768. doi: 10.1038/ncomms6768.
Switching attention from one thought to the next propels our mental lives forward. However, it is unclear how this thought-juggling affects our ability to remember these thoughts. Here we show that competition between the neural representations of pictures in working memory can impair subsequent recognition of those pictures. We use pattern classifiers to decode functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data from a retro-cueing task where participants juggle two pictures in working memory. Trial-by-trial fluctuations in neural dynamics are predictive of performance on a surprise recognition memory test: trials that elicit similar levels of classifier evidence for both pictures (indicating close competition) are associated with worse memory performance than trials where participants switch decisively from thinking about one picture to the other. This result is consistent with the non-monotonic plasticity hypothesis, which predicts that close competition can trigger weakening of memories that lose the competition, leading to subsequent forgetting.
将注意力从一个想法切换到下一个想法推动着我们的精神生活向前发展。然而,目前尚不清楚这种思维切换如何影响我们记住这些想法的能力。在这里,我们表明工作记忆中图片的神经表征之间的竞争会损害随后对这些图片的识别。我们使用模式分类器来解码来自逆向提示任务的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据,在该任务中参与者在工作记忆中处理两张图片。神经动力学的逐次试验波动可预测意外识别记忆测试的表现:对于两张图片引发相似水平分类器证据的试验(表明竞争激烈)与记忆表现较差相关,而参与者果断地从思考一张图片切换到另一张图片的试验则不然。这一结果与非单调可塑性假说一致,该假说预测激烈竞争会触发在竞争中失利的记忆的弱化,从而导致随后的遗忘。