Does theta synchronicity of sensory information enhance associative memory? Replicating the theta-induced memory effect.

Brain and neuroscience advances Pub Date : 2024-05-24 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23982128241255798
Fatih Serin, Danying Wang, Matthew H Davis, Richard Henson
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Abstract

The binding of information from different sensory or neural sources is critical for associative memory. Previous research in animals suggested that the timing of theta oscillations in the hippocampus is critical for long-term potentiation, which underlies associative and episodic memory. Studies with human participants showed correlations between theta oscillations in medial temporal lobe and episodic memory. Clouter et al. directly investigated this link by modulating the intensity of the luminance and the sound of the video clips so that they 'flickered' at certain frequencies and with varying synchronicity between the visual and auditory streams. Across several experiments, better memory was found for stimuli that flickered synchronously at theta frequency compared with no-flicker, asynchronous theta, or synchronous alpha and delta frequencies. This effect - which they called the theta-induced memory effect - is consistent with the importance of theta synchronicity for long-term potentiation. In addition, electroencephalography data showed entrainment of cortical regions to the visual and auditory flicker, and that synchronicity was achieved in neuronal oscillations (with a fixed delay between visual and auditory streams). The theoretical importance, large effect size, and potential application to enhance real-world memory mean that a replication of theta-induced memory effect would be highly valuable. The present study aimed to replicate the key differences among synchronous theta, asynchronous theta, synchronous delta, and no-flicker conditions, but within a single experiment. The results do not show evidence of improved memory for theta synchronicity in any of the comparisons. We suggest a reinterpretation of theta-induced memory effect to accommodate this non-replication.

感觉信息的θ同步性会增强联想记忆吗?复制θ诱导记忆效应。
将来自不同感官或神经源的信息结合起来对于联想记忆至关重要。以前对动物的研究表明,海马的θ振荡时间对长期潜能记忆至关重要,而长期潜能记忆是联想记忆和情节记忆的基础。对人类参与者的研究表明,内侧颞叶的θ振荡与外显记忆之间存在相关性。Clouter 等人通过调节视频片段的亮度和声音强度,使其在一定频率下 "闪烁",并在视觉和听觉流之间保持不同的同步性,从而直接研究了这种联系。在多项实验中发现,与不闪烁、异步θ或同步α和δ频率相比,同步θ频率闪烁的刺激物记忆效果更好。他们将这种效应称为θ诱导记忆效应,这与θ同步性对长期潜能的重要性是一致的。此外,脑电图数据显示,大脑皮层区域与视觉和听觉闪烁相一致,而且神经元振荡(视觉流和听觉流之间有固定延迟)也实现了同步。理论上的重要性、巨大的效应规模以及在增强现实世界记忆中的潜在应用,都意味着复制θ诱导记忆效应将非常有价值。本研究旨在复制同步θ、异步θ、同步δ和无闪烁条件之间的关键差异,但仅限于一次实验。结果显示,在任何一项比较中,都没有证据表明对θ同步性的记忆有所改善。我们建议重新解释θ诱导的记忆效应,以适应这种不可复制性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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