Brain Institute, Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, São Paulo 05652-900, Brazil
Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen, 72076, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2021 Nov 10;41(45):9392-9402. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0380-21.2021. Epub 2021 Oct 4.
Human behavior is biased by past experience. For example, when intercepting a moving target, the speed of previous targets will bias responses in future trials. Neural mechanisms underlying this so-called serial dependence are still under debate. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the previous trial leaves a neural trace in brain regions associated with encoding task-relevant information in visual and/or motor regions. We reasoned that injecting noise by means of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over premotor and visual areas would degrade such memory traces and hence reduce serial dependence. To test this hypothesis, we applied bursts of TMS pulses to right visual motion processing region hV5/MT+ and to left dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) during intertrial intervals of a coincident timing task performed by twenty healthy human participants (15 female). Without TMS, participants presented a bias toward the speed of the previous trial when intercepting moving targets. TMS over PMd decreased serial dependence in comparison to the control Vertex stimulation, whereas TMS applied over hV5/MT+ did not. In addition, TMS seems to have specifically affected the memory trace that leads to serial dependence, as we found no evidence that participants' behavior worsened after applying TMS. These results provide causal evidence that an implicit short-term memory mechanism in premotor cortex keeps information from one trial to the next, and that this information is blended with current trial information so that it biases behavior in a visuomotor integration task with moving objects. Human perception and action are biased by the recent past. The origin of such serial bias is still not fully understood, but a few components seem to be fundamental for its emergence: the brain needs to keep previous trial information in short-term memory and blend it with incoming information. Here, we present evidence that a premotor area has a potential role in storing previous trial information in short-term memory in a visuomotor task and that this information is responsible for biasing ongoing behavior. These results corroborate the perspective that areas associated with processing information of a stimulus or task also participate in maintaining that information in short-term memory even when this information is no longer relevant for current behavior.
人类的行为受到过去经验的影响。例如,在拦截移动目标时,先前目标的速度会影响未来试验中的反应。支持这种所谓序列依赖的神经机制仍存在争议。在这里,我们测试了这样一种假设,即在先前的试验中,在与视觉和/或运动区域中编码任务相关信息相关的大脑区域中留下了神经痕迹。我们推断,通过经颅磁刺激(TMS)在运动前区和视觉区域上施加噪声会破坏这种记忆痕迹,从而降低序列依赖性。为了验证这一假设,我们在 20 名健康人类参与者(15 名女性)进行的同时定时任务的试验间间隔期间,将 TMS 脉冲爆发施加到右视觉运动处理区域 hV5/MT+和左背侧运动前皮质(PMd)上。在没有 TMS 的情况下,当拦截移动目标时,参与者会偏向于先前试验的速度。与对照顶点刺激相比,PMd 上的 TMS 降低了序列依赖性,而 hV5/MT+上的 TMS 则没有。此外,TMS 似乎专门影响了导致序列依赖性的记忆痕迹,因为我们没有发现参与者在应用 TMS 后行为恶化的证据。这些结果提供了因果证据,表明运动前皮质中的一种内隐短期记忆机制将信息从一次试验保留到下一次试验,并且该信息与当前试验信息混合,从而使行为在具有移动对象的视觉运动整合任务中产生偏差。人类的感知和行为受到最近过去的影响。这种序列偏差的起源尚不完全清楚,但有几个组成部分似乎对于其出现至关重要:大脑需要将先前试验的信息保留在短期记忆中,并将其与传入信息混合。在这里,我们提供的证据表明,在视觉运动任务中,运动前区域在短期记忆中存储先前试验信息方面具有潜在作用,并且该信息负责使正在进行的行为产生偏差。这些结果证实了这样一种观点,即与刺激或任务的信息处理相关的区域也参与在短期记忆中维持该信息,即使该信息不再与当前行为相关。