Hardwicke Tom E, Taqi Mahdi, Shanks David R
Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London WC1H 0AP, United Kingdom
Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London WC1H 0AP, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 May 10;113(19):5206-11. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1601440113. Epub 2016 Apr 25.
Reconsolidation theory proposes that retrieval can destabilize an existing memory trace, opening a time-dependent window during which that trace is amenable to modification. Support for the theory is largely drawn from nonhuman animal studies that use invasive pharmacological or electroconvulsive interventions to disrupt a putative postretrieval restabilization ("reconsolidation") process. In human reconsolidation studies, however, it is often claimed that postretrieval new learning can be used as a means of "updating" or "rewriting" existing memory traces. This proposal warrants close scrutiny because the ability to modify information stored in the memory system has profound theoretical, clinical, and ethical implications. The present study aimed to replicate and extend a prominent 3-day motor-sequence learning study [Walker MP, Brakefield T, Hobson JA, Stickgold R (2003) Nature 425(6958):616-620] that is widely cited as a convincing demonstration of human reconsolidation. However, in four direct replication attempts (n = 64), we did not observe the critical impairment effect that has previously been taken to indicate disruption of an existing motor memory trace. In three additional conceptual replications (n = 48), we explored the broader validity of reconsolidation-updating theory by using a declarative recall task and sequences similar to phone numbers or computer passwords. Rather than inducing vulnerability to interference, memory retrieval appeared to aid the preservation of existing sequence knowledge relative to a no-retrieval control group. These findings suggest that memory retrieval followed by new learning does not reliably induce human memory updating via reconsolidation.
重新巩固理论提出,记忆提取会破坏现有的记忆痕迹,从而开启一个时间依赖性的窗口,在此期间该痕迹易于被修改。对该理论的支持主要来自非人类动物研究,这些研究使用侵入性药理学或电惊厥干预来破坏假定的提取后再稳定化(“重新巩固”)过程。然而,在人类重新巩固研究中,人们常常声称提取后新的学习可以用作“更新”或“重写”现有记忆痕迹的一种手段。这一主张值得仔细审视,因为修改存储在记忆系统中的信息的能力具有深刻的理论、临床和伦理意义。本研究旨在重复并扩展一项著名的为期三天的运动序列学习研究[Walker MP, Brakefield T, Hobson JA, Stickgold R (2003) Nature 425(6958):616 - 620],该研究被广泛引述为人类重新巩固的一个有说服力的例证。然而,在四次直接重复尝试(n = 64)中,我们并未观察到先前被认为表明现有运动记忆痕迹受到破坏的关键损伤效应。在另外三次概念重复(n = 48)中,我们通过使用陈述性回忆任务以及类似于电话号码或计算机密码的序列,探索了重新巩固更新理论的更广泛有效性。与无提取对照组相比,记忆提取似乎有助于保留现有序列知识,而不是导致对干扰的易感性。这些发现表明,记忆提取后再进行新的学习并不能可靠地通过重新巩固诱导人类记忆更新。