Smith Christine N, Squire Larry R
Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California 92161, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
Learn Mem. 2017 Jan 17;24(2):95-103. doi: 10.1101/lm.043851.116. Print 2017 Feb.
Eye movements can reflect memory. For example, participants make fewer fixations and sample fewer regions when viewing old versus new scenes (the repetition effect). It is unclear whether the repetition effect requires that participants have knowledge (awareness) of the old-new status of the scenes or if it can occur independent of knowledge about old-new status. It is also unclear whether the repetition effect is hippocampus-dependent or hippocampus-independent. A complication is that testing conscious memory for the scenes might interfere with the expression of unconscious (unaware), experience-dependent eye movements. In experiment 1, 75 volunteers freely viewed old and new scenes without knowledge that memory for the scenes would later be tested. Participants then made memory judgments and confidence judgments for each scene during a surprise recognition memory test. Participants exhibited the repetition effect regardless of the accuracy or confidence associated with their memory judgments (i.e., the repetition effect was independent of their awareness of the old-new status of each scene). In experiment 2, five memory-impaired patients with medial temporal lobe damage and six controls also viewed old and new scenes without expectation of memory testing. Both groups exhibited the repetition effect, even though the patients were impaired at recognizing which scenes were old and which were new. Thus, when participants viewed scenes without expectation of memory testing, eye movements associated with old and new scenes reflected unconscious, hippocampus-independent memory. These findings are consistent with the formulation that, when memory is expressed independent of awareness, memory is hippocampus-independent.
眼球运动能够反映记忆。例如,与观看新场景相比,参与者在观看旧场景时注视次数更少,扫视的区域也更少(重复效应)。目前尚不清楚重复效应是否要求参与者知晓(意识到)场景的新旧状态,或者它是否可以独立于对新旧状态的认知而出现。同样不清楚重复效应是依赖海马体还是独立于海马体。一个复杂的情况是,对场景的有意识记忆测试可能会干扰无意识(未意识到)的、依赖经验的眼球运动的表现。在实验1中,75名志愿者自由观看旧场景和新场景,且不知道之后会对场景记忆进行测试。随后,在一个意外的识别记忆测试中,参与者对每个场景进行记忆判断和信心判断。无论记忆判断的准确性或信心如何(即重复效应独立于他们对每个场景新旧状态的意识),参与者都表现出了重复效应。在实验2中,5名患有内侧颞叶损伤的记忆障碍患者和6名对照组也观看了旧场景和新场景,且没有预期会进行记忆测试。两组都表现出了重复效应,尽管患者在识别哪些场景是旧的、哪些场景是新的方面存在障碍。因此,当参与者在没有预期记忆测试的情况下观看场景时,与旧场景和新场景相关的眼球运动反映了无意识的、独立于海马体的记忆。这些发现与以下表述一致,即当记忆独立于意识表达时,记忆是独立于海马体的。