Chiu Yu-Chin, Egner Tobias
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708.
J Neurosci. 2015 Aug 26;35(34):11936-45. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0519-15.2015.
Response inhibition is a key component of executive control, but its relation to other cognitive processes is not well understood. We recently documented the "inhibition-induced forgetting effect": no-go cues are remembered more poorly than go cues. We attributed this effect to central-resource competition, whereby response inhibition saps attention away from memory encoding. However, this proposal is difficult to test with behavioral means alone. We therefore used fMRI in humans to test two neural predictions of the "common resource hypothesis": (1) brain regions associated with response inhibition should exhibit greater resource demands during encoding of subsequently forgotten than remembered no-go cues; and (2) this higher inhibitory resource demand should lead to memory encoding regions having less resources available during encoding of subsequently forgotten no-go cues. Participants categorized face stimuli by gender in a go/no-go task and, following a delay, performed a surprise recognition memory test for those faces. Replicating previous findings, memory was worse for no-go than for go stimuli. Crucially, forgetting of no-go cues was predicted by high inhibitory resource demand, as quantified by the trial-by-trial ratio of activity in neural "no-go" versus "go" networks. Moreover, this index of inhibitory demand exhibited an inverse trial-by-trial relationship with activity in brain regions responsible for the encoding of no-go cues into memory, notably the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. This seesaw pattern between the neural resource demand of response inhibition and activity related to memory encoding directly supports the hypothesis that response inhibition temporarily saps attentional resources away from stimulus processing.
Recent behavioral experiments showed that inhibiting a motor response to a stimulus (a "no-go cue") impairs subsequent memory for that cue. Here, we used fMRI to test whether this "inhibition-induced forgetting effect" is caused by competition for neural resources between the processes of response inhibition and memory encoding. We found that trial-by-trial variations in neural inhibitory resource demand predicted subsequent forgetting of no-go cues and that higher inhibitory demand was furthermore associated with lower concurrent activation in brain regions responsible for successful memory encoding of no-go cues. Thus, motor inhibition and stimulus encoding appear to compete with each other: when more resources have to be devoted to inhibiting action, less are available for encoding sensory stimuli.
反应抑制是执行控制的关键组成部分,但其与其他认知过程的关系尚未得到充分理解。我们最近记录了“抑制诱导遗忘效应”:与执行“执行”提示相比,对“不执行”提示的记忆更差。我们将此效应归因于中央资源竞争,即反应抑制会将注意力从记忆编码中转移开。然而,这一观点仅通过行为手段很难进行验证。因此,我们利用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对人类进行研究,以检验“共同资源假说”的两个神经学预测:(1)与反应抑制相关的脑区在对随后被遗忘的“不执行”提示进行编码时,应比记忆中的“不执行”提示表现出更高的资源需求;(2)这种更高的抑制资源需求应导致记忆编码区域在对随后被遗忘的“不执行”提示进行编码时可利用的资源减少。参与者在一个“执行/不执行”任务中按性别对面部刺激进行分类,经过一段时间延迟后,对这些面部进行意外的识别记忆测试。重复先前的研究结果,对“不执行”提示的记忆比对“执行”刺激的记忆更差。至关重要的是,通过神经“不执行”与“执行”网络活动的逐次试验比率量化的高抑制资源需求可预测“不执行”提示的遗忘。此外,这种抑制需求指标与负责将“不执行”提示编码到记忆中的脑区活动呈现逐次试验的反比关系,特别是腹外侧前额叶皮层。反应抑制的神经资源需求与记忆编码相关活动之间的这种跷跷板模式直接支持了这样一种假说,即反应抑制会暂时将注意力资源从刺激处理中转移开。
最近的行为实验表明,抑制对刺激(“不执行”提示)的运动反应会损害随后对该提示的记忆。在此,我们利用功能磁共振成像来检验这种“抑制诱导遗忘效应”是否由反应抑制和记忆编码过程之间对神经资源的竞争所导致。我们发现,神经抑制资源需求的逐次试验变化可预测随后对“不执行”提示的遗忘,而且更高的抑制需求还与负责对“不执行”提示进行成功记忆编码的脑区中较低的同步激活相关。因此,运动抑制和刺激编码似乎相互竞争:当需要将更多资源用于抑制行动时,用于编码感觉刺激的资源就会减少。