Forester Glen, Kroneisen Meike, Erdfelder Edgar, Kamp Siri-Maria
Department of Psychology, University of Trier, Trier, Germany.
Department of Psychology, University of Koblenz-Landau, Landau, Germany.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2020 Dec 10;14:588100. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.588100. eCollection 2020.
Humans preferentially remember information processed for their survival relevance, a memorial benefit known as the . Memory is also biased towards information associated with the prospect of reward. Given the adaptiveness of these effects, they may depend on similar mechanisms. We tested whether motivation drives both effects, with reward incentives that are known to boost extrinsic motivation and survival processing perhaps stimulating intrinsic motivation. Accordingly, we manipulated survival processing and reward incentive independently during an incidental-encoding task in which participants chose between pairs of words concerning their relevance for a scenario, and examined the effects on encoding event-related potentials (ERP) activity and later performance on a surprise recall test. We hypothesized that if survival processing fosters intrinsic motivation, it should reduce the beneficial effects of extrinsic motivation (reward incentive). In contrast to this prediction, we found that reward incentive and survival processing independently improved memory and that the P300, a measure of lower-level cognitive resource allocation, was increased by reward incentive independent of survival processing. Further, survival processing and reward incentive independently increased the frontal slow wave (FSW), a measure of higher-level elaboration. These findings suggest that while survival processing and reward incentive may both increase encoding elaboration, the memory-enhancing effect of survival processing does not depend on increased intrinsic motivation. Additionally, we replicated a recent finding whereby the survival processing effect generalizes to a choice-based encoding task and further showed that the beneficial effect of choice on memory likely does not interact with either survival processing or reward.
人类优先记住与自身生存相关的信息,这是一种被称为[具体名称未给出]的记忆优势。记忆也偏向于与奖励前景相关的信息。鉴于这些效应的适应性,它们可能依赖于相似的机制。我们进行了测试,探究动机是否驱动了这两种效应,已知奖励激励会增强外在动机,而生存相关信息的处理可能会激发内在动机。因此,我们在一个偶然编码任务中独立操纵生存相关信息处理和奖励激励,在该任务中参与者要从成对的与某个情景相关性的单词中进行选择,并检查对编码事件相关电位(ERP)活动以及随后在意外回忆测试中的表现的影响。我们假设,如果生存相关信息处理促进了内在动机,那么它应该会降低外在动机(奖励激励)的有益效果。与这一预测相反,我们发现奖励激励和生存相关信息处理分别独立地改善了记忆,并且作为较低层次认知资源分配指标的P300,在不依赖于生存相关信息处理的情况下因奖励激励而增加。此外,生存相关信息处理和奖励激励分别独立地增加了作为较高层次精细加工指标的额叶慢波(FSW)。这些发现表明,虽然生存相关信息处理和奖励激励都可能增加编码精细度,但生存相关信息处理的记忆增强效应并不依赖于内在动机的增加。此外,我们重复了最近的一项发现,即生存相关信息处理效应可推广到基于选择的编码任务,并且进一步表明选择对记忆的有益影响可能与生存相关信息处理或奖励均无相互作用。