Neural Circuits and Cognition Lab, European Neuroscience Institute, 37077 Göttingen, Germany; University Medical Center Goettingen, 37075 Göttingen, Germany; Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, German Primate Center, 37077 Göttingen, Germany.
NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, New York University, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Curr Biol. 2018 Sep 24;28(18):R1094-R1095. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.07.066.
Our visual environment constantly changes, yet we experience the world as a stable, unified whole. How is this stability achieved? It has been proposed that the brain preserves an implicit perceptual memory in sensory cortices [1] which stabilizes perception towards previously experienced states [2,3]. The role of higher-order areas, especially prefrontal cortex (PFC), in perceptual memory is less explored. Because PFC exhibits long neural time constants, invariance properties, and large receptive fields which may stabilize perception against time-varying inputs, it seems particularly suited to implement perceptual memory [4]. Support for this idea comes from a neuroimaging study reporting that dorsomedial PFC (dmPFC) correlates with perceptual memory [5]. But dmPFC also participates in decision making [6], so its contribution to perceptual memory could arise on a post-perceptual, decisional level [7]. To determine which role, if any, PFC plays in perceptual memory, we obtained direct intracranial recordings in six epilepsy patients while they performed sequential orientation judgements on ambiguous stimuli known to elicit perceptual memory [8]. We found that dmPFC activity in the high gamma frequency band (HGB, 70-150 Hz) correlates with perceptual memory. This effect is anatomically specific to dmPFC and functionally specific for memories of preceding percepts. Further, dmPFC appears to play a causal role, as a patient with a lesion in this area showed impaired perceptual memory. Thus, dmPFC integrates current sensory information with prior percepts, stabilizing visual experience against the perpetual variability of our surroundings.
我们的视觉环境不断变化,但我们体验到的世界却是稳定、统一的整体。这种稳定性是如何实现的?有人提出,大脑在感觉皮层中保存了一种隐性的知觉记忆[1],这种记忆使感知稳定在先前经历的状态[2,3]。高级区域(尤其是前额叶皮层,PFC)在知觉记忆中的作用尚未得到充分探索。由于 PFC 具有较长的神经时间常数、不变性和较大的感受野,这些特性可能使感知稳定对抗时变输入,因此它似乎特别适合实现知觉记忆[4]。支持这一观点的证据来自一项神经影像学研究,该研究报告称背内侧前额叶皮层(dmPFC)与知觉记忆相关[5]。但 dmPFC 也参与决策[6],因此它对知觉记忆的贡献可能出现在知觉后、决策层面[7]。为了确定 PFC 在知觉记忆中扮演何种角色(如果有的话),我们在 6 名癫痫患者进行顺序方位判断任务时,对他们进行了直接颅内记录,这些任务使用已知会引发知觉记忆的模糊刺激[8]。我们发现,dmPFC 在高频带(HGB,70-150 Hz)的活动与知觉记忆相关。这种效应在解剖学上是 dmPFC 特有的,在对先前知觉的记忆方面具有功能特异性。此外,dmPFC 似乎起着因果作用,因为该区域内有病变的患者表现出知觉记忆受损。因此,dmPFC 将当前的感觉信息与先前的知觉整合在一起,使视觉体验稳定在我们周围环境的持续变化中。