皮层-海马相互作用是老年人图式支持记忆编码的基础

Shenyang Huang, Paul C. Bogdan, Cortney M. Howard, Kirsten Gillette, Lifu Deng, Erin Welch, Margaret L. McAllister, Kelly S. Giovanello, Simon W. Davis, Roberto Cabeza
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摘要

虽然与年轻人相比,老年人(OAs)的外显记忆通常会受损,但如果老年人能够利用其丰富的语义知识(如图式知识),这种缺陷就会减轻。对于与已有图式一致的项目,老年人的记忆效果更好,而且这种效果在老年人中更明显。神经影像学研究表明,图式的使用与腹内侧前额叶皮层(vmPFC)和海马体(HPC)有关,但大部分研究仅限于青年行为者。这项 fMRI 研究调查了图式如何促进 OA 的外显记忆的神经机制。受试者以不同的一致性对场景-物体对进行编码,并在第二天测试对物体的记忆。图式的一致性增强了对YA的物体记忆,而对OA的增强则更为显著。FMRI 分析检验了大脑皮层对 HPC 的调节如何预测随后的记忆。在两个年龄组中,与一致性相关的vmPFC对左侧HPC的调节增强了后续记忆,而与一致性相关的角回(AG)调节仅增强了OA的后续记忆。皮质-海马调制的个体差异表明,OA 更倾向于利用其语义知识通过 AG-HPC 相互作用来促进编码,这表明存在一种补偿机制。总之,我们的研究结果表明,在图式如何通过不同的皮质-海马相互作用途径影响外显记忆编码方面,存在着与年龄相关的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cortico-hippocampal interactions underlie schema-supported memory encoding in older adults
Although episodic memory is typically impaired in older adults (OAs) compared to young adults (YAs), this deficit is attenuated when OAs can leverage their rich semantic knowledge, such as their knowledge of schemas. Memory is better for items consistent with pre-existing schemas and this effect is larger in OAs. Neuroimaging studies have associated schema use with the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and hippocampus (HPC), but most of this research has been limited to YAs. This fMRI study investigated the neural mechanisms underlying how schemas boost episodic memory in OAs. Participants encoded scene-object pairs with varying congruency, and memory for the objects was tested the following day. Congruency with schemas enhanced object memory for YAs and, more substantially, for OAs. FMRI analyses examined how cortical modulation of HPC predicted subsequent memory. Congruency-related vmPFC modulation of left HPC enhanced subsequent memory in both age groups, while congruency-related modulation from angular gyrus (AG) boosted subsequent memory only in OAs. Individual differences in cortico-hippocampal modulations indicated that OAs preferentially used their semantic knowledge to facilitate encoding via an AG-HPC interaction, suggesting a compensatory mechanism. Collectively, our findings illustrate age-related differences in how schemas influence episodic memory encoding via distinct routes of cortico-hippocampal interactions.
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