Iriye Heather, Ehrsson H Henrik
Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm 171 77, Sweden.
iScience. 2021 Dec 8;25(1):103584. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.103584. eCollection 2022 Jan 21.
Our bodies provide a necessary scaffold for memories of past events. Yet, we are just beginning to understand how feelings of one's own body during the encoding of realistic events shape memory. Participants formed memories for immersive, lifelike events by watching pre-recorded 3D videos that involved a first-person view of a mannequin's body through head mounted displays. We manipulated feelings of body ownership over the mannequin using a perceptual full-body illusion. Participants completed cued recall questions and subjective ratings (i.e., degree of reliving, emotional intensity, vividness, and belief in memory accuracy) for each video immediately following encoding and one week later. Sensing the mannequin's body as one's own during encoding enhanced the following factors: memory accuracy across testing points, immediate reliving, delayed emotional intensity, vividness, and belief in memory accuracy. These findings demonstrate that a basic sense of bodily selfhood provides a crucial foundation for the accurate reliving of the past.
我们的身体为对过去事件的记忆提供了必要的框架。然而,我们才刚刚开始了解在现实事件编码过程中自身身体感觉是如何塑造记忆的。参与者通过观看预先录制的3D视频形成对沉浸式、逼真事件的记忆,这些视频通过头戴式显示器呈现了一个人体模型身体的第一人称视角。我们利用一种全身感知错觉来操控参与者对人体模型的身体所有权感。参与者在编码后立即以及一周后,针对每个视频完成了线索回忆问题和主观评分(即重温程度、情感强度、生动程度以及对记忆准确性的信念)。在编码过程中将人体模型的身体感知为自己的身体增强了以下因素:各测试点的记忆准确性、即时重温、延迟情感强度、生动程度以及对记忆准确性的信念。这些发现表明,基本的身体自我意识为准确重温过去提供了关键基础。