Cruz Gabriela, Burgos Pablo, Kilborn Kerry, Evans Jonathan J
School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland.
Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland.
PLoS One. 2017 Sep 1;12(9):e0184037. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184037. eCollection 2017.
Time-based prospective memory (PM), remembering to do something at a particular moment in the future, is considered to depend upon self-initiated strategic monitoring, involving a retrieval mode (sustained maintenance of the intention) plus target checking (intermittent time checks). The present experiment was designed to explore what brain regions and brain activity are associated with these components of strategic monitoring in time-based PM tasks.
24 participants were asked to reset a clock every four minutes, while performing a foreground ongoing word categorisation task. EEG activity was recorded and data were decomposed into source-resolved activity using Independent Component Analysis. Common brain regions across participants, associated with retrieval mode and target checking, were found using Measure Projection Analysis.
Participants decreased their performance on the ongoing task when concurrently performed with the time-based PM task, reflecting an active retrieval mode that relied on withdrawal of limited resources from the ongoing task. Brain activity, with its source in or near the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), showed changes associated with an active retrieval mode including greater negative ERP deflections, decreased theta synchronization, and increased alpha suppression for events locked to the ongoing task while maintaining a time-based intention. Activity in the ACC was also associated with time-checks and found consistently across participants; however, we did not find an association with time perception processing per se.
The involvement of the ACC in both aspects of time-based PM monitoring may be related to different functions that have been attributed to it: strategic control of attention during the retrieval mode (distributing attentional resources between the ongoing task and the time-based task) and anticipatory/decision making processing associated with clock-checks.
基于时间的前瞻性记忆(PM),即记住在未来某个特定时刻做某事,被认为依赖于自我启动的策略性监控,包括一种检索模式(持续维持意图)加上目标检查(间歇性时间检查)。本实验旨在探究在基于时间的PM任务中,哪些脑区和脑活动与这些策略性监控成分相关。
24名参与者被要求每隔四分钟重置一次时钟,同时执行一项前景进行中的单词分类任务。记录脑电图活动,并使用独立成分分析将数据分解为源解析活动。使用测量投影分析找出参与者中与检索模式和目标检查相关的共同脑区。
当与基于时间的PM任务同时执行时,参与者在进行中的任务上的表现下降,这反映了一种积极的检索模式,该模式依赖于从进行中的任务中撤出有限的资源。起源于前扣带回皮质(ACC)或其附近的脑活动显示出与积极检索模式相关的变化,包括更大的负向ERP偏转、θ同步性降低以及与进行中的任务锁定事件相关的α抑制增加,同时维持基于时间的意图。ACC中的活动也与时间检查相关,并且在参与者中一致发现;然而,我们没有发现与时间感知处理本身的关联。
ACC参与基于时间的PM监控的两个方面可能与归因于它的不同功能有关:检索模式期间注意力的策略性控制(在进行中的任务和基于时间的任务之间分配注意力资源)以及与时钟检查相关的预期/决策处理。