Department of Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, 20246 Hamburg, Germany.
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, and.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jan 17;38(3):745-754. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1315-17.2017. Epub 2017 Dec 7.
The striatum is a central part of the dopaminergic mesolimbic system and contributes both to the encoding and retrieval of long-term memories. In this regard, the co-occurrence of striatal novelty and retrieval success effects in independent studies underlines the structure's double duty and suggests dynamic contextual adaptation. To test this hypothesis and further investigate the underlying mechanisms of encoding and retrieval dynamics, human subjects viewed pre-familiarized scene images intermixed with new scenes and classified them as indoor versus outdoor (encoding task) or old versus new (retrieval task), while fMRI and eye tracking data were recorded. Subsequently, subjects performed a final recognition task. As hypothesized, striatal activity and pupil size reflected task-conditional salience of old and new stimuli, but, unexpectedly, this effect was not reflected in the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area (SN/VTA), medial temporal lobe, or subsequent memory performance. Instead, subsequent memory generally benefitted from retrieval, an effect possibly driven by task difficulty and activity in a network including different parts of the striatum and SN/VTA. Our findings extend memory models of encoding and retrieval dynamics by pinpointing a specific contextual factor that differentially modulates the functional properties of the mesolimbic system. The mesolimbic system is involved in the encoding and retrieval of information but it is unclear how these two processes are achieved within the same network of brain regions. In particular, memory retrieval and novelty encoding were considered in independent studies, implying that novelty (new > old) and retrieval success (old > new) effects may co-occur in the striatum. Here, we used a common framework implicating the striatum, but not other parts of the mesolimbic system, in tracking context-dependent salience of old and new information. The current study, therefore, paves the way for a more comprehensive understanding of the functional properties of the mesolimbic system during memory encoding and retrieval.
纹状体是多巴胺能中脑边缘系统的核心部分,对长期记忆的编码和检索都有贡献。在这方面,独立研究中纹状体新奇性和检索成功效应的共同出现强调了该结构的双重作用,并表明了动态的上下文适应。为了检验这一假设并进一步研究编码和检索动态的潜在机制,人类被试观看了预先熟悉的场景图像,这些图像与新场景混合在一起,并将它们分类为室内或室外(编码任务)或旧或新(检索任务),同时记录 fMRI 和眼动追踪数据。随后,被试进行了最后的识别任务。正如假设的那样,纹状体活动和瞳孔大小反映了旧和新刺激的任务条件显著性,但出乎意料的是,这种效应并没有反映在黑质和腹侧被盖区(SN/VTA)、内侧颞叶或随后的记忆表现中。相反,随后的记忆通常受益于检索,这种效应可能是由任务难度和包括纹状体和 SN/VTA 不同部分的网络活动驱动的。我们的发现通过指出一个特定的上下文因素来扩展编码和检索动态的记忆模型,该因素可以调节中脑边缘系统的功能特性。中脑边缘系统参与信息的编码和检索,但不清楚这两个过程如何在同一个大脑区域网络中实现。特别是,记忆检索和新奇性编码在独立的研究中被考虑,这意味着新奇性(新>旧)和检索成功(旧>新)效应可能在纹状体中同时出现。在这里,我们使用了一个共同的框架,将纹状体(而不是中脑边缘系统的其他部分)牵连到跟踪旧和新信息的上下文相关显著性中。因此,本研究为更全面地理解中脑边缘系统在记忆编码和检索过程中的功能特性铺平了道路。