Liu Zhong-Xu, Shen Kelly, Olsen Rosanna K, Ryan Jennifer D
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6A 2E1, and
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6A 2E1, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Jan 18;37(3):599-609. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2610-16.2016.
Eye movements serve to accumulate information from the visual world, contributing to the formation of coherent memory representations that support cognition and behavior. The hippocampus and the oculomotor network are well connected anatomically through an extensive set of polysynaptic pathways. However, the extent to which visual sampling behavior is related to functional responses in the hippocampus during encoding has not been studied directly in human neuroimaging. In the current study, participants engaged in a face processing task while brain responses were recorded with fMRI and eye movements were monitored simultaneously. The number of gaze fixations that a participant made on a given trial was correlated significantly with hippocampal activation such that more fixations were associated with stronger hippocampal activation. Similar results were also found in the fusiform face area, a face-selective perceptual processing region. Notably, the number of fixations was associated with stronger hippocampal activation when the presented faces were novel, but not when the faces were repeated. Increases in fixations during viewing of novel faces also led to larger repetition-related suppression in the hippocampus, indicating that this fixation-hippocampal relationship may reflect the ongoing development of lasting representations. Together, these results provide novel empirical support for the idea that visual exploration and hippocampal binding processes are inherently linked.
The hippocampal and oculomotor networks have each been studied extensively for their roles in the binding of information and gaze function, respectively. Despite the evidence that individuals with amnesia whose damage includes the hippocampus show alterations in their eye movement patterns and recent findings that the two systems are anatomically connected, it has not been demonstrated whether visual exploration is related to hippocampal activity in neurologically intact adults. In this combined fMRI-eye-tracking study, we show how hippocampal responses scale with the number of gaze fixations made during viewing of novel, but not repeated, faces. These findings provide new evidence suggesting that the hippocampus plays an important role in the binding of information, as sampled by gaze fixations, during visual exploration.
眼动有助于从视觉世界中积累信息,促进连贯记忆表征的形成,从而支持认知和行为。海马体和动眼神经网络在解剖学上通过广泛的多突触通路紧密相连。然而,在编码过程中视觉采样行为与海马体功能反应之间的关联程度,尚未在人类神经影像学研究中得到直接探究。在本研究中,参与者在进行面部处理任务时,通过功能磁共振成像(fMRI)记录大脑反应,并同时监测眼动。参与者在给定试验中注视的次数与海马体激活显著相关,即注视次数越多,海马体激活越强。在梭状回面部区(一个面部选择性感知处理区域)也发现了类似结果。值得注意的是,当呈现的面孔是新面孔时,注视次数与更强的海马体激活相关,而当面孔重复时则不然。观看新面孔时注视次数的增加也导致海马体中与重复相关的抑制作用增强,这表明这种注视 - 海马体关系可能反映了持久表征的持续发展。总之,这些结果为视觉探索与海马体绑定过程内在相关这一观点提供了新的实证支持。
海马体和动眼神经网络分别因其在信息绑定和注视功能中的作用而被广泛研究。尽管有证据表明,海马体受损的失忆个体的眼动模式会发生改变,且近期研究发现这两个系统在解剖学上相互连接,但尚未证实视觉探索与神经功能正常的成年人的海马体活动是否相关。在这项功能磁共振成像与眼动追踪相结合的研究中,我们展示了海马体反应如何随着观看新面孔(而非重复面孔)时的注视次数而变化。这些发现提供了新的证据,表明海马体在视觉探索过程中,对于由注视采样的信息绑定起着重要作用。