Event segmentation protects emotional memories from competing experiences encoded close in time

被引:48
作者
Dunsmoor, Joseph E. [1 ]
Kroes, Marijn C. W. [2 ]
Moscatelli, Caroline M. [3 ]
Evans, Michael D. [3 ]
Davachi, Lila [4 ]
Phelps, Elizabeth A. [3 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Dept Psychiat, Austin, TX 78712 USA
[2] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Med Ctr, Dept Cognit Neurosci, Donders Inst Brain Cognit & Behav, Nijmegen, Netherlands
[3] NYU, Dept Psychol, 6 Washington Pl, New York, NY 10003 USA
[4] Columbia Univ, Dept Psychol, New York, NY 10027 USA
[5] NYU, Ctr Neural Sci, New York, NY 10003 USA
[6] Nathan S Kline Inst Psychiat Res, Orangeburg, NY USA
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
BETA-ADRENERGIC-RECEPTORS; FEAR EXTINCTION; CONSOLIDATION; AMYGDALA; ACQUISITION; PERCEPTION; BOUNDARIES; DISTINCT; CONTEXT; RECOVERY;
D O I
10.1038/s41562-018-0317-4
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Fear memories are characterized by their permanence and a fierce resistance to unlearning by new experiences. We considered whether this durability involves a process of memory segmentation that separates competing experiences. To address this question, we used an emotional-learning task designed to measure recognition memory for category exemplars encoded during competing experiences of fear conditioning and extinction. Here, we show that people recognized more fear-conditioned exemplars encoded during conditioning than conceptually related exemplars encoded immediately after a perceptual event boundary that separates conditioning from extinction. Selective episodic memory depended on a period of consolidation, an explicit break between competing experiences, and was unrelated to within-session arousal or the explicit realization of a transition from conditioning to extinction. Collectively, these findings suggest that event boundaries guide selective consolidation to prioritize emotional information in memory-at the expense of related but conflicting information experienced shortly thereafter. We put forward a model whereby event boundaries bifurcate related memory traces for incompatible experiences. This is in contrast to a mechanism that integrates related experiences for adaptive generalization(1-3), and reveals a potentially distinct organization by which competing memories are adaptively segmented to select and protect nascent fear memories from immediate sources of interference.
引用
收藏
页码:291 / +
页数:12
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