Acute Stress Effects on Statistical Learning and Episodic Memory

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1162/jocn_a_02178
Brynn E. Sherman;Isabella Huang;Elaine G. Wijaya;Nicholas B. Turk-Browne;Elizabeth V. Goldfarb
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Abstract

Stress is widely considered to negatively impact hippocampal function, thus impairing episodic memory. However, the hippocampus is not merely the seat of episodic memory. Rather, it also (via distinct circuitry) supports statistical learning. On the basis of rodent work suggesting that stress may impair the hippocampal pathway involved in episodic memory while sparing or enhancing the pathway involved in statistical learning, we developed a behavioral experiment to investigate the effects of acute stress on both episodic memory and statistical learning in humans. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: stress (socially evaluated cold pressor) immediately before learning, stress ∼15 min before learning, or no stress. In the learning task, participants viewed a series of trial-unique scenes (allowing for episodic encoding of each image) in which certain scene categories reliably followed one another (allowing for statistical learning of associations between paired categories). Memory was assessed 24 hr later to isolate stress effects on encoding/learning rather than retrieval. We found modest support for our hypothesis that acute stress can amplify statistical learning: Only participants stressed ∼15 min in advance exhibited reliable evidence of learning across multiple measures. Furthermore, stress-induced cortisol levels predicted statistical learning retention 24 hr later. In contrast, episodic memory did not differ by stress condition, although we did find preliminary evidence that acute stress promoted memory for statistically predictable information and attenuated competition between statistical and episodic encoding. Together, these findings provide initial insights into how stress may differentially modulate learning processes within the hippocampus.
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急性压力对统计学习和外显记忆的影响
人们普遍认为压力会对海马体的功能产生负面影响,从而损害表观记忆。然而,海马体并不仅仅是外显记忆的所在地。相反,它(通过不同的回路)还支持统计学习。啮齿类动物的研究表明,压力可能会损害海马体中参与外显记忆的通路,而饶恕或增强参与统计学习的通路,在此基础上,我们开发了一项行为实验,研究急性压力对人类外显记忆和统计学习的影响。实验参与者被随机分配到三种条件之一:学习前立即应激(社会评价冷加压)、学习前 15 分钟应激或无应激。在学习任务中,受试者观看一系列试验唯一的场景(允许对每幅图像进行外显编码),在这些场景中,某些场景类别可靠地相互跟随(允许对配对类别之间的关联进行统计学习)。24 小时后对记忆进行评估,以分离压力对编码/学习而非检索的影响。我们发现,急性应激会放大统计学习这一假设得到了适度的支持:只有提前 15 分钟受到压力的参与者才会在多项测量中表现出可靠的学习证据。此外,应激诱导的皮质醇水平可以预测 24 小时后统计学习的保持情况。相反,尽管我们发现了初步证据表明急性应激促进了对统计可预测信息的记忆,并削弱了统计编码和外显编码之间的竞争,但外显记忆并没有因应激条件的不同而有所差异。总之,这些研究结果为我们提供了关于压力如何在海马内对学习过程进行不同调节的初步见解。
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来源期刊
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.10%
发文量
151
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience investigates brain–behavior interaction and promotes lively interchange among the mind sciences.
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