Kluen Lisa Marieke, Nixon Patricia, Agorastos Agorastos, Wiedemann Klaus, Schwabe Lars
Department of Cognitive Psychology, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry, University Clinic Hamburg- Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2017 May;42(6):1254-1261. doi: 10.1038/npp.2016.256. Epub 2016 Nov 14.
Pre-existing knowledge, a 'schema', facilitates the encoding, consolidation, and retrieval of schema-relevant information. Such schema-based memory is key to every form of education and provides intriguing insights into the integration of new information and prior knowledge. Stress is known to have a critical impact on memory processes, mainly through the action of glucocorticoids and catecholamines. However, whether stress and these major stress mediators affect schema-based learning is completely unknown. To address this question, we performed two experiments, in which participants acquired a schema on day 1 and learned schema-related as well as schema-unrelated information on day 2. In the first experiment, participants underwent a stress or control manipulation either immediately or about 25 min before schema-based memory testing. The second experiment tested whether glucocorticoid and/or noradrenergic activation is sufficient to modulate schema-based memory. To this end, participants received orally a placebo, hydrocortisone, the α2-adrenoceptor-antagonist yohimbine, leading to increased noradrenergic stimulation, or both drugs, before completing the schema-based memory test. Our data indicate that stress, irrespective of the exact timing of the stress exposure, impaired schema-based learning, while leaving learning of schema-unrelated information intact. A very similar effect was obtained after hydrocortisone, but not yohimbine, administration. These data show that stress disrupts participants' ability to benefit from prior knowledge during learning and that glucocorticoid activation is sufficient to produce this effect. Our findings provide novel insights into the impact of stress and stress hormones on the dynamics of human memory and have important practical implications, specifically for educational contexts.
先前存在的知识,即“图式”,有助于对与图式相关的信息进行编码、巩固和检索。这种基于图式的记忆是各种教育形式的关键,并为新信息与先前知识的整合提供了有趣的见解。已知压力主要通过糖皮质激素和儿茶酚胺的作用对记忆过程产生关键影响。然而,压力和这些主要的压力介质是否会影响基于图式的学习完全未知。为了解决这个问题,我们进行了两项实验,其中参与者在第1天获得一个图式,并在第2天学习与图式相关以及与图式无关的信息。在第一个实验中,参与者在基于图式的记忆测试前立即或大约25分钟接受压力或对照操作。第二个实验测试了糖皮质激素和/或去甲肾上腺素能激活是否足以调节基于图式的记忆。为此,参与者在完成基于图式的记忆测试前口服安慰剂、氢化可的松、α2肾上腺素能拮抗剂育亨宾(导致去甲肾上腺素能刺激增加)或两种药物。我们的数据表明,无论压力暴露的确切时间如何,压力都会损害基于图式的学习,而与图式无关的信息学习则不受影响。氢化可的松给药后获得了非常相似的效果,但育亨宾给药后没有。这些数据表明,压力会破坏参与者在学习过程中从先前知识中受益的能力,并且糖皮质激素激活足以产生这种效果。我们的研究结果为压力和压力激素对人类记忆动态的影响提供了新的见解,并具有重要的实际意义,特别是在教育背景方面。