Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
Hippocampus. 2021 Apr;31(4):362-374. doi: 10.1002/hipo.23293. Epub 2020 Dec 15.
Structural integrity of the human hippocampus is widely acknowledged to be necessary for the successful encoding and retrieval of autobiographical memories. However, evidence for an association between hippocampal volume and the ability to recall such memories in healthy individuals is mixed. Here we examined this issue further by combining two approaches. First, we focused on the anatomically distinct subregions of the hippocampus where more nuanced associations may be expressed compared to considering the whole hippocampal volume. A manual segmentation protocol of hippocampal subregions allowed us to separately calculate the volumes of the dentate gyrus/CA4, CA3/2, CA1, subiculum, pre/parasubiculum and uncus. Second, a critical feature of autobiographical memories is that they can span long time periods, and so we sought to consider how memory details persist over time by conducting a longitudinal study whereby participants had to recall the same autobiographical memories on two visits spaced 8 months apart. Overall, we found that there was no difference in the total number of internal (episodic) details produced at Visits 1 and 2. However, further probing of detail subcategories revealed that specifically the amount of subjective thoughts and emotions included during recall had declined significantly by the second visit. We also observed a strong correlation between left pre/parasubiculum volume and the amount of autobiographical memory internal details produced over time. This positive relationship was evident for particular facets of the memories, with remembered events, perceptual observations and thoughts and emotions benefitting from greater volume of the left pre/parasubiculum. These preliminary findings expand upon existing functional neuroimaging evidence by highlighting a potential link between left pre/parasubiculum volume and autobiographical memory. A larger pre/parasubiculum appears not only to protect against memory decay, but may possibly enhance memory persistence, inviting further scrutiny of the role of this brain region in remote autobiographical memory retrieval.
人类海马体的结构完整性被广泛认为是成功编码和检索自传体记忆所必需的。然而,在健康个体中,海马体体积与回忆这些记忆的能力之间的关联证据存在分歧。在这里,我们通过结合两种方法进一步研究了这个问题。首先,我们关注海马体的解剖上不同的亚区,与考虑整个海马体体积相比,这些亚区可能表达更细微的关联。海马体亚区的手动分割方案使我们能够分别计算齿状回/CA4、CA3/2、CA1、下托、前/副下托和钩回的体积。其次,自传体记忆的一个关键特征是它们可以跨越很长的时间,因此我们试图通过进行一项纵向研究来考虑记忆细节如何随着时间的推移而持续,在这项研究中,参与者必须在相隔 8 个月的两次访问中回忆相同的自传体记忆。总的来说,我们发现第一次和第二次访问时产生的内部(情节)细节总数没有差异。然而,进一步探究细节子类别揭示了,特别是在回忆时包含的主观想法和情绪的数量,在第二次访问时已经显著下降。我们还观察到左前/副下托体积与随时间产生的自传体记忆内部细节数量之间存在很强的相关性。这种正相关关系对于记忆的特定方面是明显的,记忆中的事件、感知观察以及思想和情绪都受益于左前/副下托体积的增加。这些初步发现扩展了现有的功能神经影像学证据,强调了左前/副下托体积与自传体记忆之间的潜在联系。更大的前/副下托不仅似乎可以防止记忆衰退,而且可能增强记忆的持久性,这进一步促使我们审视该脑区在遥远的自传体记忆检索中的作用。