错误后果严重程度对重要性偏倚前瞻记忆提示加工的影响。

Cerebral cortex communications Pub Date : 2021-09-07 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1093/texcom/tgab056
Kristina Krasich, Eva Gjorgieva, Samuel Murray, Shreya Bhatia, Myrthe Faber, Felipe De Brigard, Marty G Woldorff
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摘要

前瞻记忆(PM)使人们能够记住在未来完成重要任务。如果不这样做,可能会导致不同程度的后果。在这里,我们研究了差错后果严重程度如何影响触发差错的相关线索的神经加工,以及该加工对相关预期任务表现的影响。参与者扮演一个为虚构的学生提供午餐的自助餐厅工作人员,并必须记住为学生提供替代午餐(作为PM提示),否则这些学生将经历中度或严重的厌恶反应。头皮记录的事件相关电位(ERP)测量显示,反映对先前学习刺激的基于感知的神经反应的早潜伏期额叶阳性在严重和中度PM提示之间没有差异。相比之下,较长潜伏期的顶叶阳性反应被认为反映了完整的PM提示识别和后检索过程,严重的PM提示比中等的PM提示更早地引起。这种对严重后果PM提示的更快的顶叶阳性实例随后是更快和更准确的行为反应。这些发现表明,PM的相对重要性如何在神经上以增强和更快的PM线索识别和处理的形式实例化,并最终形成更好的PM。
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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The Impact of Error-Consequence Severity on Cue Processing in Importance-Biased Prospective Memory.

Prospective memory (PM) enables people to remember to complete important tasks in the future. Failing to do so can result in consequences of varying severity. Here, we investigated how PM error-consequence severity impacts the neural processing of relevant cues for triggering PM and the ramification of that processing on the associated prospective task performance. Participants role-played a cafeteria worker serving lunches to fictitious students and had to remember to deliver an alternative lunch to students (as PM cues) who would otherwise experience a moderate or severe aversive reaction. Scalp-recorded, event-related potential (ERP) measures showed that the early-latency frontal positivity, reflecting the perception-based neural responses to previously learned stimuli, did not differ between the severe versus moderate PM cues. In contrast, the longer-latency parietal positivity, thought to reflect full PM cue recognition and post-retrieval processes, was elicited earlier by the severe than the moderate PM cues. This faster instantiation of the parietal positivity to the severe-consequence PM cues was then followed by faster and more accurate behavioral responses. These findings indicate how the relative importance of a PM can be neurally instantiated in the form of enhanced and faster PM-cue recognition and processing and culminate into better PM.

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