Department of Psychology, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Program in Brain, Mind, and Consciousness, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 18;15(11):e0234668. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0234668. eCollection 2020.
Accumulating evidence suggests that rhythmic temporal structures in the environment influence memory formation. For example, stimuli that appear in synchrony with the beat of background, environmental rhythms are better remembered than stimuli that appear out-of-synchrony with the beat. This rhythmic modulation of memory has been linked to entrained neural oscillations which are proposed to act as a mechanism of selective attention that prioritize processing of events that coincide with the beat. However, it is currently unclear whether rhythm influences memory formation by influencing early (sensory) or late (post-perceptual) processing of stimuli. The current study used stimulus-locked event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate the locus of stimulus processing at which rhythm temporal cues operate in the service of memory formation. Participants viewed a series of visual objects that either appeared in-synchrony or out-of-synchrony with the beat of background music and made a semantic classification (living/non-living) for each object. Participants' memory for the objects was then tested (in silence). The timing of stimulus presentation during encoding (in-synchrony or out-of-synchrony with the background beat) influenced later ERPs associated with post-perceptual selection and orienting attention in time rather than earlier ERPs associated with sensory processing. The magnitude of post-perceptual ERPs also differed according to whether or not participants demonstrated a mnemonic benefit for in-synchrony compared to out-of-synchrony stimuli, and was related to the magnitude of the rhythmic modulation of memory performance across participants. These results support two prominent theories in the field, the Dynamic Attending Theory and the Oscillation Selection Hypothesis, which propose that neural responses to rhythm act as a core mechanism of selective attention that optimize processing at specific moments in time. Furthermore, they reveal that in addition to acting as a mechanism of early attentional selection, rhythm influences later, post-perceptual cognitive processes as events are transformed into memory.
越来越多的证据表明,环境中的节奏时间结构会影响记忆的形成。例如,与背景环境节奏同步出现的刺激比与节奏不同步出现的刺激更容易被记住。这种记忆的节奏调制与被锁定的神经振荡有关,这些神经振荡被认为是一种选择性注意的机制,优先处理与节奏相吻合的事件。然而,目前尚不清楚节奏是否通过影响刺激的早期(感觉)或晚期(知觉后)处理来影响记忆的形成。本研究使用刺激锁定事件相关电位(ERP)来研究在记忆形成过程中,节奏时间线索作用于刺激处理的位置。参与者观看一系列视觉物体,这些物体要么与背景音乐的节奏同步出现,要么不同步出现,并对每个物体进行语义分类(生物/非生物)。然后对参与者对物体的记忆进行测试(在安静中)。在编码过程中刺激呈现的时间(与背景节奏同步或不同步)会影响与知觉后选择和定向注意力有关的后期 ERP,而不是与感觉处理有关的早期 ERP。后期 ERP 的幅度也根据参与者是否表现出与同步刺激相比对不同步刺激的记忆优势而有所不同,并且与参与者之间记忆表现的节奏调制幅度有关。这些结果支持了该领域的两个主要理论,即动态注意理论和振荡选择假说,这两个理论都提出,对节奏的神经反应是选择性注意的核心机制,可优化特定时刻的处理。此外,它们表明,节奏不仅可以作为早期注意力选择的机制,还可以影响后期的知觉后认知过程,因为事件被转化为记忆。