Zou Futing, Kuhl Brice A, DuBrow Sarah, Hutchinson J Benjamin
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.
Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 May 15:2024.05.14.594263. doi: 10.1101/2024.05.14.594263.
More than a century of research shows that spaced learning improves long-term memory. Yet, there remains debate concerning why. A major limitation to resolving theoretical debates is the lack of evidence for how neural representations change as a function of spacing. Here, leveraging a massive-scale 7T human fMRI dataset, we tracked neural representations and behavioral expressions of memory as participants viewed thousands of natural scene images that repeated at lags ranging from seconds to many months. We show that spaced learning increases the similarity of human ventromedial prefrontal cortex representations across stimulus encounters and, critically, these increases parallel and predict the behavioral benefits of spacing. Additionally, we show that these spacing benefits critically depend on remembering and, in turn, 're-encoding' past experience. Collectively, our findings provide fundamental insight into how spaced learning influences neural representations and why spacing is beneficial.
一个多世纪的研究表明,间隔学习能提高长期记忆。然而,关于其原因仍存在争议。解决理论争论的一个主要限制是缺乏关于神经表征如何随间隔变化的证据。在此,我们利用一个大规模的7T人类功能磁共振成像数据集,在参与者观看数千张自然场景图像时跟踪记忆的神经表征和行为表现,这些图像以从几秒到数月不等的间隔重复出现。我们发现,间隔学习会增加人类腹内侧前额叶皮层表征在不同刺激接触之间的相似性,关键的是,这些增加与间隔的行为益处平行且可预测间隔的行为益处。此外,我们表明这些间隔学习的益处关键取决于对过去经历的记忆,进而“重新编码”过去的经历。总体而言,我们的研究结果为间隔学习如何影响神经表征以及间隔学习为何有益提供了基本见解。