Department of Cognitive and Behavioral Sciences, Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project, Tokyo, Japan; Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan.
Psychology Department and Neuroscience Program, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA; Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2021 Feb 12;152:107733. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2020.107733. Epub 2020 Dec 24.
Social interactions enhance human memories, but little is known about how the neural mechanisms underlying episodic memories are modulated by rewarding outcomes in social interactions. To investigate this, fMRI data were recorded while healthy young adults encoded unfamiliar faces in either a competition or a control task. In the competition task, participants encoded opponents' faces in the rock-paper-scissors game, where trial-by-trial outcomes of Win, Draw, and Lose for participants were shown by facial expressions of opponents (Angry, Neutral, and Happy). In the control task, participants encoded faces by assessing facial expressions. After encoding, participants recognized faces previously learned. Behavioral data showed that emotional valence for opponents' Angry faces as the Win outcome was rated positively in the competition task, whereas the rating for Angry faces was rated negatively in the control task, and that Angry faces were remembered more accurately than Neutral or Happy faces in both tasks. fMRI data showed that activation in the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) paralleled the pattern of valence ratings, with greater activation for the Win than Draw or Lose conditions of the competition task, and the Angry condition of the control task. Moreover, functional connectivity between the mOFC and hippocampus was increased in Win compared to Angry, and the mOFC-hippocampus functional connectivity predicted individual differences in subsequent memory performance only in Win of the competition task, but not in any other conditions of the two tasks. These results demonstrate that the memory enhancement by context-dependent social rewards involves interactions between reward- and memory-related regions.
社交互动增强了人类的记忆,但人们对于社会互动中奖励结果如何调节情景记忆的神经机制知之甚少。为了研究这一点,研究人员记录了健康的年轻成年人在竞争或控制任务中编码不熟悉面孔时的 fMRI 数据。在竞争任务中,参与者在石头剪刀布游戏中编码对手的面孔,参与者的每一轮输赢结果(Win、Draw 和 Lose)通过对手的面部表情(生气、中性和开心)显示出来。在控制任务中,参与者通过评估面部表情来编码面孔。编码后,参与者识别之前学习过的面孔。行为数据表明,在竞争任务中,作为赢的结果,参与者对对手生气面孔的情绪效价评价是积极的,而在控制任务中,对生气面孔的评价是消极的,并且在两个任务中,生气面孔比中性或开心面孔记得更准确。fMRI 数据显示,眶额内侧皮层(mOFC)的激活与效价评价模式平行,在竞争任务中,赢的条件比平局或输的条件激活更大,而在控制任务中,生气条件的激活更大。此外,mOFC 与海马体之间的功能连接在赢的情况下比生气的情况下增加,并且 mOFC-海马体功能连接仅在竞争任务的赢的情况下预测随后记忆表现的个体差异,而在两个任务的任何其他条件下均不预测。这些结果表明,由上下文相关的社会奖励引起的记忆增强涉及奖励和记忆相关区域之间的相互作用。