Desgranges B, Baron J C, Eustache F
INSERM U320 and, University of Caen, Caen Cedex, 14033, France.
Neuroimage. 1998 Aug;8(2):198-213. doi: 10.1006/nimg.1998.0359.
Because it allows direct mapping of synaptic activity during behavior in the normal subject, functional neuroimaging with the activation paradigm, especially positron emission tomography, has recently provided insight into our understanding of the functional neuroanatomy of episodic memory over and above established knowledge from lesional neuropsychology. The most striking application relates to the ability to distinguish the structures implicated in the encoding and the retrieval of episodic information, as these processes are extremely difficult to differentiate with behavioral tasks, either in healthy subjects or in brain-damaged patients. Regarding encoding and retrieval, the results from most studies converge on the involvement of the prefrontal cortex in these processes, with a hemispheric encoding/retrieval asymmetry (HERA) such that the left side is preferentially involved in encoding, and the right in retrieval. However, there are still some questions, for instance, about bilateral activation during retrieval and a possible specialization within the prefrontal cortex. More expected from human and monkey lesional data, the hippocampal formation appears to play a role in both the encoding and the retrieval of episodic information, but the exact conditions which determine hippocampal activation and its fine-grained functional neuroanatomy have yet to be fully elucidated. Other structures are activated during episodic memory tasks, with asymmetric activation that fits the HERA model, such as preferentially left-sided activation of the association temporal and posterior cingulate areas in encoding tasks and preferentially right-sided activation of the association parietal cortex, cerebellum, and posterior cingulate in retrieval tasks. However, this hemispheric asymmetry appears to depend to some extent on the material used. These new data enhance our capacity to comprehend episodic memory deficits in neuropsychology, as well as the neural mechanisms underlying the age-related changes in episodic memory performances.
由于激活范式的功能神经成像技术,尤其是正电子发射断层扫描技术,能够在正常受试者的行为过程中直接映射突触活动,因此最近它让我们对情景记忆的功能神经解剖学的理解有了新的认识,这超出了从损伤性神经心理学获得的现有知识。最引人注目的应用是能够区分与情景信息编码和提取相关的结构,因为无论是在健康受试者还是脑损伤患者中,这些过程都极难通过行为任务进行区分。关于编码和提取,大多数研究结果都表明前额叶皮层参与了这些过程,存在一种半球编码/提取不对称性(HERA),即左侧优先参与编码,右侧优先参与提取。然而,仍然存在一些问题,例如,关于提取过程中的双侧激活以及前额叶皮层内可能存在的特化。正如人类和猴子的损伤数据所预期的那样,海马结构似乎在情景信息的编码和提取中都发挥作用,但决定海马激活的确切条件及其精细的功能神经解剖学尚未完全阐明。在情景记忆任务中,其他结构也会被激活,其不对称激活符合HERA模型,例如在编码任务中联合颞叶和后扣带回区域优先左侧激活,在提取任务中联合顶叶皮层、小脑和后扣带回优先右侧激活。然而,这种半球不对称性似乎在一定程度上取决于所使用的材料。这些新数据增强了我们理解神经心理学中情景记忆缺陷以及情景记忆表现中与年龄相关变化背后的神经机制的能力。