Department of Psychology, Faculty of Health, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada; Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Health, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada; Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada; Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
Curr Biol. 2017 Jan 23;27(2):257-262. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.11.027. Epub 2016 Dec 29.
The hippocampus plays an important role in memory for events that are distinct in space and time. One of the strongest, most synchronous neural signals produced by the hippocampus is the sharp-wave ripple (SWR), observed in a variety of mammalian species during offline behaviors, such as slow-wave sleep [1-3] and quiescent waking and pauses in exploration [4-8], leading to long-standing and widespread theories of its contribution to plasticity and memory during these inactive or immobile states [9-14]. Indeed, during sleep and waking inactivity, hippocampal SWRs in rodents appear to support spatial long-term and working memory [4, 15-23], but so far, they have not been linked to memory in primates. More recently, SWRs have been observed during active, visual scene exploration in macaques [24], opening up the possibility that these active-state ripples in the primate hippocampus are linked to memory for objects embedded in scenes. By measuring hippocampal SWRs in macaques during search for scene-contextualized objects, we found that SWR rate increased with repeated presentations. Furthermore, gaze during SWRs was more likely to be near the target object on repeated than on novel presentations, even after accounting for overall differences in gaze location with scene repetition. This proximity bias with repetition occurred near the time of target object detection for remembered targets. The increase in ripple likelihood near remembered visual objects suggests a link between ripples and memory in primates; specifically, SWRs may reflect part of a mechanism supporting the guidance of search based on past experience.
海马体在记忆具有明确时空特征的事件方面发挥着重要作用。海马体产生的最强、最同步的神经信号之一是尖波涟漪(SWR),在各种哺乳动物离线行为中都可以观察到,如慢波睡眠[1-3]和安静的清醒以及探索暂停[4-8],这导致了其在这些不活跃或不动状态下对可塑性和记忆的贡献的长期广泛理论[9-14]。事实上,在睡眠和清醒的不活动期间,啮齿动物的海马体 SWR 似乎支持空间长期和工作记忆[4,15-23],但到目前为止,它们与灵长类动物的记忆没有联系。最近,在猕猴的主动视觉场景探索中观察到了 SWR[24],这使得灵长类动物海马体中的这些主动状态的涟漪与场景中嵌入的物体的记忆有关。通过在猕猴搜索场景上下文化物体期间测量海马体的 SWR,我们发现 SWR 率随着重复呈现而增加。此外,在 SWR 期间的注视更有可能在重复而不是新颖呈现时靠近目标物体,即使在考虑到场景重复时总体注视位置的差异之后也是如此。这种与重复相关的接近偏差发生在记忆目标对象的目标对象检测附近。在记忆的视觉对象附近的涟漪可能性增加表明了在灵长类动物中,涟漪和记忆之间存在联系;具体而言,SWR 可能反映了基于过去经验引导搜索的机制的一部分。