Berthoz A
Laboratoire de Physiologie de la Perception et de l'Action, Collège de Francce, CNRS, Paris, France.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1997 Oct 29;352(1360):1437-48. doi: 10.1098/rstb.1997.0130.
This paper reviews the involvement of the parietal cortex and the hippocampus in three kinds of spatial memory tasks which all require a memory of a previously experienced movement in space. The first task compared, by means of positron emission tomography (PET) scan techniques, the production, in darkness, of self-paced saccades (SAC) with the reproduction, in darkness, of a previously learned sequence of saccades to visual targets (SEQ). The results show that a bilateral increase of activity was seen in the depth of the intraparietal sulcus and the medial superior parietal cortex (superior parietal gyrus and precuneus) together with the frontal sulcus but only in the SEQ task, which involved memory of the previously seen targets and possibly also motor memory. The second task is the vestibular memory contingent task, which requires that the subject makes, in darkness, a saccade to the remembered position of a visual target after a passively imposed whole-body rotation. Deficits in this task, which involves vestibular memory, were found predominantly in patients with focal vascular lesions in the parieto-insular (vestibular) cortex, the supplementary motor area-supplementary eye field area, and the prefrontal cortex. The third task requires mental navigation from the memory of a previously learned route in a real environment (the city of Orsay in France). A PET scan study has revealed that when subjects were asked to remember visual landmarks there was a bilateral activation of the middle hippocampal regions, left inferior temporal gyrus, left hippocampal regions, precentral gyrus and posterior cingulate gyrus. If the subjects were asked to remember the route, and their movements along this route, bilateral activation of the dorsolateral cortex, posterior hippocampal areas, posterior cingulate gyrus, supplementary motor areas, right middle hippocampal areas, left precuneus, middle occipital gyrus, fusiform gyrus and lateral premotor area was found. Subtraction between the two conditions reduced the activated areas to the left hippocampus, precuneus and insula. These data suggest that the hippocampus and parietal cortex are both involved in the dynamic aspects of spatial memory, for which the name 'topokinetic memory' is proposed. These dynamic aspects could both overlap and be different from those involved in the cartographic and static aspects of 'topographic' memory.
本文综述了顶叶皮层和海马体在三种空间记忆任务中的作用,这三种任务均需要对先前在空间中经历过的运动进行记忆。第一项任务通过正电子发射断层扫描(PET)技术,比较了在黑暗中自主进行的扫视运动(SAC)与在黑暗中重现先前学习的针对视觉目标的扫视序列(SEQ)。结果显示,仅在SEQ任务中,顶内沟深处、内侧顶上叶皮层(顶上叶回和楔前叶)以及额沟区域出现了双侧活动增强,该任务涉及对先前看到的目标的记忆,可能还包括运动记忆。第二项任务是前庭记忆依存任务,要求受试者在被动进行全身旋转后,在黑暗中向视觉目标的记忆位置进行扫视。在这项涉及前庭记忆的任务中,缺陷主要出现在顶叶 - 岛叶(前庭)皮层、辅助运动区 - 辅助眼区以及前额叶皮层有局灶性血管病变的患者中。第三项任务要求根据对真实环境(法国奥赛市)中先前学习路线的记忆进行心理导航。一项PET扫描研究表明,当受试者被要求记住视觉地标时,海马体中部区域、左颞下回、左海马体区域、中央前回和后扣带回出现双侧激活。如果受试者被要求记住路线及其沿该路线的运动,则会发现背外侧皮层、海马体后部区域、后扣带回、辅助运动区、右海马体中部区域、左楔前叶、枕中回、梭状回和外侧运动前区出现双侧激活。两种条件下的相减操作使激活区域减少到左海马体、楔前叶和脑岛。这些数据表明,海马体和顶叶皮层都参与了空间记忆的动态方面,为此提出了“拓扑运动记忆”这一名称。这些动态方面可能与“地形”记忆的制图和静态方面既有重叠又有所不同。