Brainlab-Cognitive Neuroscience Research Group, Departament de Psicologia Clinica i Psicobiologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Institut de Neurociències, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Psychophysiology. 2024 Nov;61(11):e14652. doi: 10.1111/psyp.14652. Epub 2024 Jul 11.
Our actions shape our everyday experience: what we experience, how we perceive, and remember it are deeply affected by how we interact with the world. Performing an action to deliver a stimulus engages neurophysiological processes which are reflected in the modulation of sensory and pupil responses. We hypothesized that these processes shape memory encoding, parsing the experience by grouping self- and externally generated stimuli into differentiated events. Participants encoded sound sequences, in which either the first or last few sounds were self-generated and the rest externally generated. We tested recall of the sequential order of sounds that had originated from the same (within event) or different sources (across events). Memory performance was not higher for within-event sounds, suggesting that actions did not structure the memory representation. However, during encoding, we observed the expected electrophysiological response attenuation for self-generated sounds, together with increased pupil dilation triggered by actions. Moreover, at the boundary between events, physiological responses to the first sound from the new source were influenced by the direction of the source switch. Our results suggest that introducing actions creates a stronger contextual shift than removing them, even though actions do not directly contribute to memory performance. This study contributes to our understanding of how interacting with sensory input shapes experiences by exploring the relationships between action effects on sensory responses, pupil dilation, and memory encoding. Importantly, it challenges the notion of a meaningful contribution from low-level neurophysiological mechanisms associated with action execution in the modulation of the self-generation effect.
我们所经历的、感知到的和记住的内容,都受到我们与世界互动方式的深刻影响。执行一个动作来传递刺激会引发神经生理过程,这些过程反映在对感官和瞳孔反应的调节上。我们假设这些过程会影响记忆编码,通过将自我产生的和外部产生的刺激分组为不同的事件来解析体验。参与者对声音序列进行编码,其中前几个或后几个声音是自我产生的,其余的是外部产生的。我们测试了源自同一来源(内部事件)或不同来源(跨事件)的声音的顺序回忆。内部事件声音的记忆表现并没有更高,这表明动作并没有构建记忆表示。然而,在编码过程中,我们观察到了自我产生声音的预期的电生理反应衰减,以及由动作触发的瞳孔扩张增加。此外,在事件之间的边界处,对新来源的第一个声音的生理反应受到来源切换方向的影响。我们的结果表明,引入动作比去除动作会产生更强的上下文转变,尽管动作不会直接影响记忆表现。这项研究通过探索动作对感官反应、瞳孔扩张和记忆编码的影响之间的关系,有助于我们理解与感官输入相互作用如何塑造体验。重要的是,它挑战了与动作执行相关的低水平神经生理机制在自我产生效应调节中具有有意义贡献的观点。