Center for Lifespan Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany; Department of Psychology, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Germany.
Center for Lifespan Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Neuropsychologia. 2020 Nov;148:107658. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2020.107658. Epub 2020 Oct 16.
Our episodic memories vary in their specificity, ranging from a mere sense of familiarity to detailed recollection of the initial experience. Recent work suggests that alpha/beta desynchronization promotes information flow through the cortex, tracking the richness in detail of recovered memory representations. At the same time, as we age, memories become less vivid and detailed, which may be reflected in age-related reductions in alpha/beta desynchronization during retrieval. To understand age differences in the specificity of episodic memories, we investigated differences in alpha/beta desynchronization between younger (18-26 years, n = 31) and older (65-76 years, n = 27) adults during item recognition and lure discrimination. Alpha/beta desynchronization increased linearly with the demand for memory specificity, i.e., the requirement to retrieve details for an accurate response, across retrieval situations (correct rejections < item recognition < lure discrimination). Stronger alpha/beta desynchronization was related to memory success, as indicated by reliable activation differences between correct and incorrect memory responses. In line with the assumption of a loss of mnemonic detail in older age, older adults had more difficulties than younger adults to discriminate lures from targets. Importantly, they also showed a reduced modulation of alpha/beta desynchronization across retrieval demands. Together, these results extend previous findings by demonstrating that alpha/beta desynchronization dissociates between item recognition and the retrieval of highly detailed memories as required in lure discrimination, and that age-related impairments in episodic retrieval are accompanied by attenuated modulations in the alpha/beta band. Thus, we provide novel findings suggesting that alpha/beta desynchronization tracks mnemonic specificity and that changes in these oscillatory mechanisms may underlie age-related declines in episodic memory.
我们的情景记忆在其特异性上有所不同,从仅仅有一种熟悉感到对初始体验的详细回忆。最近的研究表明,α/β去同步化促进了皮层中的信息流,跟踪恢复记忆表现的细节丰富度。与此同时,随着年龄的增长,记忆变得不那么生动和详细,这可能反映在与年龄相关的检索过程中α/β去同步化的减少。为了了解情景记忆特异性的年龄差异,我们研究了在项目识别和诱饵辨别过程中,年轻(18-26 岁,n=31)和年长(65-76 岁,n=27)成年人之间的α/β去同步化差异。α/β去同步化随记忆特异性的需求呈线性增加,即需要检索细节以做出准确反应,这种需求在检索情境中(正确拒绝<项目识别<诱饵辨别)是一致的。更强的α/β去同步化与记忆成功有关,这表现为正确和错误记忆反应之间存在可靠的激活差异。与年长时记忆细节丧失的假设一致,年长成年人比年轻成年人更难以区分诱饵和目标。重要的是,他们在不同的检索需求下,α/β去同步化的调制也减少了。这些结果扩展了以前的发现,表明α/β去同步化在项目识别和需要在诱饵辨别中检索高度详细记忆的记忆检索之间分离,并且与年龄相关的情景记忆检索损伤伴随着α/β波段调制的减弱。因此,我们提供了新的发现,表明α/β去同步化跟踪记忆特异性,并且这些振荡机制的变化可能是与年龄相关的情景记忆下降的基础。