Sneve Markus H, Grydeland Håkon, Nyberg Lars, Bowles Ben, Amlien Inge K, Langnes Espen, Walhovd Kristine B, Fjell Anders M
Research Group for Lifespan Changes in Brain and Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, 0373 Oslo, Norway,
Research Group for Lifespan Changes in Brain and Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, 0373 Oslo, Norway.
J Neurosci. 2015 Apr 1;35(13):5202-12. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4434-14.2015.
We continuously encounter and process novel events in the surrounding world, but only some episodes will leave detailed memory traces that can be recollected after weeks and months. Here, our aim was to monitor brain activity during encoding of events that eventually transforms into long-term stable memories. Previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have shown that the degree of activation of different brain regions during encoding is predictive of later recollection success. However, most of these studies tested participants' memories the same day as encoding occurred, whereas several lines of research suggest that extended post-encoding processing is of crucial importance for long-term consolidation. Using fMRI, we tested whether the same encoding mechanisms are predictive of recollection success after hours as after a retention interval of several weeks. Seventy-eight participants were scanned during an associative encoding task and given a source memory test the same day or after ∼6 weeks. We found a strong link between regional activity levels during encoding and recollection success over short time intervals. However, results further showed that durable source memories, i.e., events recollected after several weeks, were not simply the events associated with the highest activity levels at encoding. Rather, strong levels of connectivity between the right hippocampus and perceptual areas, as well as with parts of the self-referential default-mode network, seemed instrumental in establishing durable source memories. Thus, we argue that an initial intensity-based encoding is necessary for short-term encoding of events, whereas additional processes involving hippocampal-cortical communication aid transformation into stable long-term memories.
我们不断地在周围世界中遭遇并处理新事件,但只有一些片段会留下详细的记忆痕迹,在数周和数月后仍可被回忆起来。在此,我们的目的是监测在最终转化为长期稳定记忆的事件编码过程中的大脑活动。先前的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究表明,编码过程中不同脑区的激活程度可预测随后的回忆成功与否。然而,这些研究大多在编码发生的当天测试参与者的记忆,而多项研究表明,编码后的延长处理对长期巩固至关重要。我们使用fMRI测试了相同的编码机制在数小时后以及数周的保留期后是否对回忆成功具有预测性。78名参与者在一项联想编码任务期间接受扫描,并在当天或约6周后接受源记忆测试。我们发现在短时间间隔内,编码期间的区域活动水平与回忆成功之间存在紧密联系。然而,结果进一步表明,持久的源记忆,即数周后回忆起的事件,并非仅仅是与编码时最高活动水平相关的事件。相反,右侧海马体与感知区域之间以及与自我参照默认模式网络的部分之间的强连接水平,似乎对建立持久的源记忆起着重要作用。因此,我们认为基于强度的初始编码对于事件的短期编码是必要的,而涉及海马体 - 皮质通信的额外过程有助于转化为稳定的长期记忆。