Basile Benjamin M, Hampton Robert R
Emory University and Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Emory University and Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Cognition. 2017 Sep;166:398-406. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.06.009. Epub 2017 Jun 13.
Source memory, or memory for the context in which a memory was formed, is a defining characteristic of human episodic memory and source memory errors are a debilitating symptom of memory dysfunction. Evidence for source memory in nonhuman primates is sparse despite considerable evidence for other types of sophisticated memory and the practical need for good models of episodic memory in nonhuman primates. A previous study showed that rhesus monkeys confused the identity of a monkey they saw with a monkey they heard, but only after an extended memory delay. This suggests that they initially remembered the source - visual or auditory - of the information but forgot the source as time passed. Here, we present a monkey model of source memory that is based on this previous study. In each trial, monkeys studied two images, one that they simply viewed and touched and the other that they classified as a bird, fish, flower, or person. In a subsequent memory test, they were required to select the image from one source but avoid the other. With training, monkeys learned to suppress responding to images from the to-be-avoided source. After longer memory intervals, monkeys continued to show reliable item memory, discriminating studied images from distractors, but made many source memory errors. Monkeys discriminated source based on study method, not study order, providing preliminary evidence that our manipulation of retention interval caused errors due to source forgetting instead of source confusion. Finally, some monkeys learned to select remembered images from either source on cue, showing that they did indeed remember both items and both sources. This paradigm potentially provides a new model to study a critical aspect of episodic memory in nonhuman primates.
来源记忆,即对记忆形成时的背景的记忆,是人类情景记忆的一个决定性特征,而来源记忆错误是记忆功能障碍的一种使人衰弱的症状。尽管有大量证据表明非人类灵长类动物存在其他类型的复杂记忆,且对非人类灵长类动物情景记忆的良好模型有实际需求,但关于非人类灵长类动物来源记忆的证据却很少。先前的一项研究表明,恒河猴会将它们看到的一只猴子的身份与它们听到的一只猴子的身份混淆,但这仅发生在较长的记忆延迟之后。这表明它们最初记住了信息的来源——视觉或听觉——但随着时间的推移忘记了来源。在此,我们基于先前的这项研究提出一种来源记忆的猴子模型。在每次试验中,猴子研究两张图像,一张是它们简单观看并触摸的,另一张是它们归类为鸟、鱼、花或人的。在随后的记忆测试中,它们被要求从一个来源中选择图像,而避开另一个来源。通过训练,猴子学会抑制对来自要避开的来源的图像做出反应。在更长的记忆间隔后,猴子继续表现出可靠的项目记忆,能将研究过的图像与干扰物区分开来,但会犯许多来源记忆错误。猴子根据研究方法而非研究顺序来区分来源,这提供了初步证据,表明我们对保持间隔的操纵导致的错误是由于来源遗忘而非来源混淆。最后,一些猴子学会了根据提示从任何一个来源中选择记住的图像,这表明它们确实记住了项目和来源。这种范式有可能为研究非人类灵长类动物情景记忆的一个关键方面提供一个新模型。