Hodgetts Carl J, Voets Natalie L, Thomas Adam G, Clare Stuart, Lawrence Andrew D, Graham Kim S
Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre, School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF24 4HQ, United Kingdom,
Oxford Centre for Functional MRI of the Brain, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, United Kingdom, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Mar 22;37(12):3150-3159. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3225-16.2017. Epub 2017 Feb 17.
Recent "representational" accounts suggest a key role for the hippocampus in complex scene perception. Due to limitations in scanner field strength, however, the functional neuroanatomy of hippocampal-dependent scene perception is unknown. Here, we applied 7 T high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) alongside a perceptual oddity task, modified from nonhuman primate studies. This task requires subjects to discriminate highly similar scenes, faces, or objects from multiple viewpoints, and has revealed selective impairments during scene discrimination following hippocampal lesions. Region-of-interest analyses identified a preferential response in the subiculum subfield of the hippocampus during scene, but not face or object, discriminations. Notably, this effect was in the anteromedial subiculum and was not modulated by whether scenes were subsequently remembered or forgotten. These results highlight the value of ultra-high-field fMRI in generating more refined, anatomically informed, functional accounts of hippocampal contributions to cognition, and a unique role for the human subiculum in discrimination of complex scenes from different viewpoints. There is increasing evidence that the human hippocampus supports functions beyond just episodic memory, with human lesion studies suggesting a contribution to the perceptual processing of navigationally relevant, complex scenes. While the hippocampus itself contains several small, functionally distinct subfields, examining the role of these in scene processing has been previously limited by scanner field strength. By applying ultra-high-resolution 7 T fMRI, we delineated the functional contribution of individual hippocampal subfields during a perceptual discrimination task for scenes, faces, and objects. This demonstrated that the discrimination of scenes, relative to faces and objects, recruits the anterior subicular region of the hippocampus, regardless of whether scenes were subsequently remembered or forgotten.
近期的“表征”理论认为海马体在复杂场景感知中起关键作用。然而,由于扫描仪场强的限制,依赖海马体的场景感知的功能神经解剖学尚不清楚。在此,我们应用7T高分辨率功能磁共振成像(fMRI)并结合一项从非人灵长类动物研究中改编而来的感知异常任务。该任务要求受试者从多个视角辨别高度相似的场景、面孔或物体,并且已揭示出海马体损伤后在场景辨别过程中存在选择性损伤。感兴趣区域分析表明,在场景辨别过程中,海马体的下托子区域存在优先反应,而在面孔或物体辨别时则没有。值得注意的是,这种效应出现在前内侧下托,并且不受场景随后是被记住还是被遗忘的影响。这些结果凸显了超高场fMRI在生成更精细、具有解剖学依据的海马体对认知贡献的功能描述方面的价值,以及人类下托在从不同视角辨别复杂场景中的独特作用。越来越多的证据表明,人类海马体所支持的功能不仅仅局限于情景记忆,人类损伤研究表明其对与导航相关的复杂场景的感知处理有贡献。虽然海马体本身包含几个小的、功能不同的子区域,但之前对这些子区域在场景处理中作用的研究受到扫描仪场强的限制。通过应用超高分辨率的7T fMRI,我们在对场景、面孔和物体的感知辨别任务中描绘了各个海马体子区域的功能贡献。这表明,相对于面孔和物体,场景辨别会激活海马体的前下托区域,无论场景随后是被记住还是被遗忘。