Steinemann Natalie A, Moisello Clara, Ghilardi M Felice, Kelly Simon P
Biomedical Engineering Department, The City College of The City University of New York, 160 Convent Ave, New York, NY 10031, USA.
Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education, The City College of The City University of New York, 160 Convent Ave, New York, NY 10031, USA.
Neuroimage. 2016 Aug 15;137:152-164. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.05.001. Epub 2016 May 5.
The neural correlates of memory formation in humans have long been investigated by exposing subjects to diverse material and comparing responses to items later remembered to those forgotten. Tasks requiring memorization of sensory sequences afford unique possibilities for linking neural memorization processes to behavior, because, rather than comparing across different items of varying content, each individual item can be examined across the successive learning states of being initially unknown, newly learned, and eventually, fully known. Sequence learning paradigms have not yet been exploited in this way, however. Here, we analyze the event-related potentials of subjects attempting to memorize sequences of visual locations over several blocks of repeated observation, with respect to pre- and post-block recall tests. Over centro-parietal regions, we observed a rapid P300 component superimposed on a broader positivity, which exhibited distinct modulations across learning states that were replicated in two separate experiments. Consistent with its well-known encoding of surprise, the P300 deflection monotonically decreased over blocks as locations became better learned and hence more expected. In contrast, the broader positivity was especially elevated at the point when a given item was newly learned, i.e., started being successfully recalled. These results implicate the Broad Positivity in endogenously-driven, intentional memory formation, whereas the P300, in processing the current stimulus to the degree that it was previously uncertain, indexes the cumulative knowledge thereby gained. The decreasing surprise/P300 effect significantly predicted learning success both across blocks and across subjects. This presents a new, neural-based means to evaluate learning capabilities independent of verbal reports, which could have considerable value in distinguishing genuine learning disabilities from difficulties to communicate the outcomes of learning, or perceptual impairments, in a range of clinical brain disorders.
长期以来,通过让受试者接触各种材料,并比较他们对后来记住的项目和遗忘项目的反应,人们一直在研究人类记忆形成的神经关联。需要记忆感觉序列的任务为将神经记忆过程与行为联系起来提供了独特的可能性,因为与比较不同内容的不同项目相比,每个单独的项目可以在最初未知、新学以及最终完全熟悉的连续学习状态下进行检查。然而,序列学习范式尚未以这种方式得到利用。在这里,我们分析了受试者在几个重复观察块中试图记忆视觉位置序列时的事件相关电位,并与块前和块后回忆测试相关。在中央顶叶区域,我们观察到一个快速的P300成分叠加在一个更广泛的正电位上,该正电位在不同学习状态下表现出明显的调制,这在两个独立的实验中得到了重复。与它众所周知的对惊讶的编码一致,随着位置变得更易学习从而更可预期,P300偏转在各个块中单调下降。相比之下,更广泛的正电位在给定项目新学之时,即开始被成功回忆之时尤其升高。这些结果表明,广泛正电位与内源性驱动的有意记忆形成有关,而P300在处理当前刺激到先前不确定的程度时,索引了由此获得的累积知识。惊讶/P300效应的下降显著预测了跨块和跨受试者的学习成功。这提出了一种新的、基于神经的方法来评估独立于言语报告的学习能力,这在区分真正的学习障碍与在一系列临床脑部疾病中难以传达学习结果或感知障碍方面可能具有相当大的价值。