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Alpha/Beta Oscillations Indicate Inhibition of Interfering Visual Memories
被引:124
作者:
Waldhauser, Gerd T.
[1
]
Johansson, Mikael
[1
]
Hanslmayr, Simon
[2
]
机构:
[1] Lund Univ, Dept Psychol, S-22100 Lund, Sweden
[2] Univ Konstanz, Dept Psychol, D-78457 Constance, Germany
基金:
瑞典研究理事会;
关键词:
LONG-TERM-MEMORY;
VISUOSPATIAL ATTENTION;
EPISODIC MEMORY;
WORKING-MEMORY;
SPATIAL ATTENTION;
OCCIPITAL CORTEX;
NETWORK MODEL;
BOLD SIGNAL;
EEG;
RETRIEVAL;
D O I:
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4201-11.2012
中图分类号:
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号:
071006 ;
摘要:
Selective retrieval of a specific target memory often leads to the forgetting of related but irrelevant memories. Current cognitive theory states that such retrieval-induced forgetting arises due to inhibition of competing memory traces. To date, however, direct neural evidence for this claim has not been forthcoming. Studies on selective attention suggest that cortical inhibition is mediated by increased brain oscillatory activity in the alpha/beta frequency band. The present study, testing 18 human subjects, investigated whether these mechanisms can be generalized to selective memory retrieval in which competing memories interfere with the retrieval of a target memory. Our experiment was designed so that each cue used to search memory was associated with a target memory and a competitor memory stored in separate brain hemispheres. Retrieval-induced forgetting was observed in a condition in which the competitor memory interfered with target retrieval. Increased oscillatory alpha/beta power was observed over the hemisphere housing the sensory representation of the competitor memory trace and predicted the amount of retrieval-induced forgetting in the subsequent memory test. These results provide the first direct evidence for inhibition of competing memories during episodic memory retrieval and suggest that competitive retrieval is governed by inhibitory mechanisms similar to those employed in selective attention.
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页码:1953 / 1961
页数:9
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