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1.
Neurobiol Learn Mem ; 206: 107861, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37944637

ABSTRACT

Reinstating the context present at encoding during the test phase generally enhances recognition memory compared with changing the context when specific item-context associations are established during encoding. However, it remains unclear whether context reinstatement improves the performance in differentiating between old and similar items in recognition memory tests and what underlying cognitive processes are involved. Using the context reinstatement paradigm together with event-related potentials (ERP), we examined the context-dependent effects of background scenes on recognition discrimination among similar objects. Participants were instructed to associate intentionally specific objects with background scenes during the encoding phase and subsequently complete an object recognition memory task, during which old and similar new objects were presented superimposed over the studied old or similar new background scenes. Electroencephalogram was recorded to measure the electrophysiological manifestations of cognitive processes associated with episodic retrieval. Behavioral results revealed enhanced performance in differentiating old from similar objects in the old context, as opposed to the similar context condition. Importantly, ERP results indicated a more pronounced recollection-related parietal object old/new effect in the old context compared to the similar context condition. This suggests that the ability to distinguish between old and similar objects in recognition memory is primarily driven by recollection rather than familiarity, particularly when the encoding context is reinstated during the test phase. Our findings are in line with the account that the impact of context reinstatement on object recognition memory is attributable to the enhanced recollection of specific item-context associations during retrieval and provides evidence for the specificity of episodic associative representations.


Subject(s)
Memory, Episodic , Recognition, Psychology , Humans , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Electroencephalography , Visual Perception , Reaction Time/physiology , Mental Recall/physiology
2.
Brain Res ; 1748: 147077, 2020 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32861676

ABSTRACT

Associative recognition requires discriminating between old items and conjunction lures constructed by recombining elements from two different study items. This task can be solved not only by recollection but also by familiarity if the to-be-remembered stimuli are perceived as a unitized representation. In two event-related potential (ERP) studies, we provide evidence for the integration of internal and external facial features by showing that the early frontal old-new effect (considered a correlate of familiarity) is modulated by the specific combination of facial features. Participants studied faces consisting of internal features (eyes, eyebrows, nose, and mouth) paired with external features (hair, head shape, and ears). During the testing phase, intact, recombined, and new faces were presented. Recombined faces consisted of internal and external features taken from two different studied faces. The results showed that at the frontal sites, during the time window from 300 to 500 ms, ERPs to intact faces were more positive than those to new and recombined faces; the latter two did not differ from one another. The late parietal effect was observed only after a more extended study phase in Experiment 2. We take the modulation of the early frontal old-new effect as evidence for the contribution of familiarity to associative recognition for combinations of internal and external facial features.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Visual Cortex/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Electroencephalography , Face , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction Time/physiology , Young Adult
3.
Exp Aging Res ; 42(4): 348-64, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27410243

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND/STUDY CONTEXT: Elderly people do not categorize emotional facial expressions as accurately as younger people, particularly negative emotions. Although age-related impairments in decoding emotions in facial expressions are well documented, the causes of this deficit are poorly understood. This study examined the potential mechanisms that account for this age-related categorization deficit by assessing its dependence on presentation time. METHODS: Thirty young (19-27 years old) and 31 older (68-78 years old) Chinese adults were asked to categorize the six basic emotions in facial expressions, each presented for 120, 200, 600, or 1000 ms, before and after exposure to a neutral facial expression. RESULTS: Shortened presentation times caused an age-related deficit in the recognition of happy faces, whereas no deficit was observed at longer exposure times. An age-related deficit was observed for all negative emotions but was not exacerbated by shorter presentation times. CONCLUSION: Age-related deficits in categorization of positive and negative emotions are caused by different mechanisms. Because negative emotions are perceptually similar, they cause high categorization demands. Elderly people may need more evidence in favor of the target emotion than younger people, and they make mistakes if this surplus of evidence is missing. In contrast, perceptually distinct happy faces were easily identified, and elderly people only failed when the presentation time was too short for their slower perceptual processing.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Emotions , Facial Expression , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
4.
Front Psychol ; 7: 97, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26903905

ABSTRACT

Researchers have proposed that the culture in which we are raised shapes the way that we attend to the objects and events that surround us. What remains unclear, however, is how early any such culturally-inflected differences emerge in development. Here, we address this issue directly, asking how 24-month-old infants from the US and China deploy their attention to objects and actions in dynamic scenes. By analyzing infants' eye movements while they observed dynamic scenes, the current experiment revealed striking convergences, overall, in infants' patterns of visual attention in the two communities, but also pinpointed a brief period during which their attention reliably diverged. This divergence, though modest, suggested that infants from the US devoted relatively more attention to the objects and those from China devoted relatively more attention to the actions in which they were engaged. This provides the earliest evidence for strong overlap in infants' attention to objects and events in dynamic scenes, but also raises the possibility that by 24 months, infants' attention may also be shaped subtly by the culturally-inflected attentional proclivities characteristic of adults in their cultural communities.

5.
Di Yi Jun Yi Da Xue Xue Bao ; 22(2): 121-3, 2002 Feb.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12390803

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between protein kinase C (PKC) and multidrug resistance (MDR) in cancer cell line KBV200. METHODS: MTT assay was used to evaluate the IC50 of vincristine (VCR) and adriamycin (ADR) in KB cell line and its VCR-resistant derivative KBV200 cells. PKC activities in the 2 cell lines were assayed by measuring the incorporation of (32)P from [gamma-(32)P] ATP into the peptide substrates. RESULTS: The IC50 values of VCR and ADR in KBV200 cells was 64.03 and 18.8 folds greater than those in KB cells. PKC activities of the membrane and cytosol fraction in KBV200 cells were increased compared with that in KB cells, with the total PKC activity 1.12-fold higher. Phorbol-12-myristate-13 -acetate increased PKC activity of the membrane fraction and IC50 values of KBV200 cells, while staurosporine worked to the opposite effects. CONCLUSION: PKC may contribute to MDR mechanism in KBV200 cells.


Subject(s)
Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Doxorubicin/pharmacology , Drug Resistance, Multiple/physiology , Humans , KB Cells , Statistics as Topic , Subcellular Fractions , Vincristine/pharmacology
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