Werchan Denise M, Collins Anne G E, Frank Michael J, Amso Dima
Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, and.
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720.
J Neurosci. 2016 Oct 5;36(40):10314-10322. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1351-16.2016.
Recent research indicates that adults and infants spontaneously create and generalize hierarchical rule sets during incidental learning. Computational models and empirical data suggest that, in adults, this process is supported by circuits linking prefrontal cortex (PFC) with striatum and their modulation by dopamine, but the neural circuits supporting this form of learning in infants are largely unknown. We used near-infrared spectroscopy to record PFC activity in 8-month-old human infants during a simple audiovisual hierarchical-rule-learning task. Behavioral results confirmed that infants adopted hierarchical rule sets to learn and generalize spoken object-label mappings across different speaker contexts. Infants had increased activity over right dorsal lateral PFC when rule sets switched from one trial to the next, a neural marker related to updating rule sets into working memory in the adult literature. Infants' eye blink rate, a possible physiological correlate of striatal dopamine activity, also increased when rule sets switched from one trial to the next. Moreover, the increase in right dorsolateral PFC activity in conjunction with eye blink rate also predicted infants' generalization ability, providing exploratory evidence for frontostriatal involvement during learning. These findings provide evidence that PFC is involved in rudimentary hierarchical rule learning in 8-month-old infants, an ability that was previously thought to emerge later in life in concert with PFC maturation.
Hierarchical rule learning is a powerful learning mechanism that allows rules to be selected in a context-appropriate fashion and transferred or reused in novel contexts. Data from computational models and adults suggests that this learning mechanism is supported by dopamine-innervated interactions between prefrontal cortex (PFC) and striatum. Here, we provide evidence that PFC also supports hierarchical rule learning during infancy, challenging the current dogma that PFC is an underdeveloped brain system until adolescence. These results add new insights into the neurobiological mechanisms available to support learning and generalization in very early postnatal life, providing evidence that PFC and the frontostriatal circuitry are involved in organizing learning and behavior earlier in life than previously known.
近期研究表明,成人和婴儿在偶然学习过程中会自发地创建并归纳层次规则集。计算模型和实证数据表明,在成人中,这一过程由连接前额叶皮质(PFC)与纹状体的神经回路及其多巴胺调节所支持,但支持婴儿这种学习形式的神经回路在很大程度上尚不清楚。我们使用近红外光谱技术,在一项简单的视听层次规则学习任务中记录8个月大婴儿的前额叶皮质活动。行为结果证实,婴儿采用层次规则集来学习并归纳不同说话者情境下的口语对象标签映射。当规则集从一次试验切换到下一次试验时,婴儿右侧背外侧前额叶皮质的活动增强,这是一种在成人文献中与将规则集更新到工作记忆中相关的神经标记。当规则集从一次试验切换到下一次试验时,婴儿的眨眼频率(纹状体多巴胺活动的一种可能生理关联指标)也会增加。此外,右侧背外侧前额叶皮质活动与眨眼频率的增加还能预测婴儿的归纳能力,为学习过程中前额叶纹状体的参与提供了探索性证据。这些发现证明,前额叶皮质参与了8个月大婴儿的基本层次规则学习,而这种能力此前被认为是在生命后期随着前额叶皮质成熟才会出现。
层次规则学习是一种强大的学习机制,它允许在适合情境的方式下选择规则,并在新情境中转移或重用。来自计算模型和成人的数据表明,这种学习机制由前额叶皮质(PFC)和纹状体之间多巴胺支配的相互作用所支持。在此,我们提供证据表明,前额叶皮质在婴儿期也支持层次规则学习, 这对当前认为前额叶皮质直到青春期才是未发育成熟的脑系统的教条提出了挑战。这些结果为出生后早期支持学习和归纳的神经生物学机制增添了新见解,证明前额叶皮质和前额叶纹状体回路在生命早期比以前所知的更早参与组织学习和行为。