检索实践的益处与健康的年轻人和老年人的颞叶和额叶活动有关

Cerebral cortex communications Pub Date : 2022-02-17 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1093/texcom/tgac009
Catherine-Noémie Alexandrina Guran, Lorena Deuker, Martin Göttlich, Nikolai Axmacher, Nico Bunzeck
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要检索实践比重新研究更能提高长期记忆中信息的保留,但这种“检索实践效应”(RPE)的潜在神经机制仍知之甚少。因此,我们调查了在最终检索时,先前检索的项目与重新研究的项目之间的行为和神经差异。30名年轻人(20-30岁)和25名老年人(50岁以上)通过检索或重新研究学习熟悉和新的图片刺激。在最终识别时,使用功能性磁共振成像(fMRI)测量血液动力学活动。在行为上,年轻人和老年人表现出相似的检索实践的好处,具有更高的回忆,但熟悉率不变。在功能磁共振成像数据的单变量分析中,无论年龄大小,内侧前额叶皮层和左颞区的激活都与个体从检索实践中获得的行为益处有关。与这一观察结果相一致,在多元表征相似性分析(RSA)中,检索实践导致在先验定义的感兴趣区域(包括内侧颞叶以及前额叶和顶叶皮层)中重新测试项目的模式相似性增加。我们的研究结果表明,检索练习可以增强年轻人和老年人的长期记忆,这种影响可能是由快速巩固过程驱动的。
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Benefit from retrieval practice is linked to temporal and frontal activity in healthy young and older humans.

Retrieval practice improves retention of information in long-term memory more than restudy, but the underlying neural mechanisms of this "retrieval practice effect" (RPE) remain poorly understood. Therefore, we investigated the behavioral and neural differences between previously retrieved versus restudied items at final retrieval. Thirty younger (20-30 years old) and twenty-five older (50+ years old) adults learned familiar and new picture stimuli either through retrieval or restudy. At final recognition, hemodynamic activity was measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Behaviorally, younger and older adults showed similar benefits of retrieval practice, with higher recollection, but unchanged familiarity rates. In a univariate analysis of the fMRI data, activation in medial prefrontal cortex and left temporal regions correlated with an individual's amount of behavioral benefit from retrieval practice, irrespective of age. Compatible with this observation, in a multivariate representational similarity analysis (RSA), retrieval practice led to an increase in pattern similarity for retested items in a priori defined regions of interest, including the medial temporal lobe, as well as prefrontal and parietal cortex. Our findings demonstrate that retrieval practice leads to enhanced long-term memories in younger and older adults alike, and this effect may be driven by fast consolidation processes.

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