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兒時記憶和大腦-Mo Costandi
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胡卜凱
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嵩麟淵明
胡卜凱

我們應該都曾有過:

為什麼記不得小時候的事情?和
為什麼小時候的記憶非常模糊?

這類疑問。

柯斯坦迪先生這篇報導就上述問題做了一個初步回答。

該報導對所得答案和相關的各種實驗有詳細報導,請參考。

基本上,我們的「記憶」或「記憶力」和我們身體各類器官一樣,都需要經過一個「成長過程」才能成形、成熟、或達到(本身「基因組合」所預先設定的)上限。

我相信「『意識』的最根本元素是『記憶』」以及「『我』的最根本成分是『(我的)意識』」這兩個假說;我不得不接受:「『我』是一個動態的、隨時間改變的個體」這個結論。

英文術語及詞彙索引

encoding (memory)
將生物體內、外在刺激以某種形式植入大腦記憶細胞的過程。請見「記憶」詞條下的「超連接」。
engrams
記憶載體
perineuronal net --
神經細胞周邊網絡
ensembles –
集合體
episodic memories –
事件型記憶
gist-like –
重點式
hippocampus –
海馬迴大腦結構區之一主司記憶定位等功能。
inhibitory neurons –
具抑制性功能的神經細胞。
memory –
記憶另請參考:
THE NEUROSCIENCE OF MEMORY
Memory: Neurobiological mechanisms and assessment


Children can only form vague memories — until their brain undergoes this shift

New research shows that the transition from general to specific memories involves the maturation of inhibitory neurons in the hippocampus.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

Early childhood memories are “gist-like,” while the ability to form precise memories for life events emerges between five and eight years of age. 
*  New research shows that the transition from general to specific memories involves the maturation of inhibitory neurons in a brain structure called the hippocampus
*  The findings could improve our understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders.

Mo Costandi, 06/16/23

When asked about our earliest memories, most of us have vague recollections from early childhood but can only recall specific events from about five to eight years of age. Early childhood memories are imprecise, or “gist-like,” because the brain mechanisms needed to form more specific memories of life events are absent, or not yet fully matured, at birth.     

The ability to form precise memories for life events (or episodic memories) involves a brain structure called the hippocampus. But exactly how this ability emerges remains unclear. Researchers in Canada have now identified a shift in the cellular mechanisms underlying memory formation, which occurs as the hippocampus matures, allowing for precision memory encoding. Their findings were 
published in the journal Science.

The hippocampus and memory formation

Memories are thought to be encoded within ensembles of neurons, sometimes referred to as engrams, which in adults are distributed sparsely throughout the hippocampus. Adam Ramsaran of the University of Toronto and his colleagues hypothesized that there may be a relationship between the size of an engram and the precision of the memory it encodes. 

To investigate, the researchers first trained juvenile and adult mice on a contextual fear task. They placed the animals into a test chamber and administered mild electric shocks to their feet at a specific location. 

The researchers then put the animals into a somewhat similar chamber and found that the juveniles, but not the adults, exhibited a 
fear response when they entered the equivalent area of the second chamber. This suggested that the adults had formed specific memories of the context in which they had received the shocks while the juveniles had only formed general memories.

When they examined the animals’ brains, Ramsaran and his colleagues did indeed find a difference in the size of engrams between the juveniles and adults. The researchers measured the expression of c-Fos, an “immediate early” gene activated in cells forming new engrams, and found that it was active in around 40% of hippocampal neurons in the juveniles, compared to just 20% in the adults.    

The researchers then used sophisticated chemical-genetic methods to inhibit or activate subsets of hippocampal cells, so that they could artificially “shrink” the engrams in juvenile mice and “expand” those of adults before training the animals on the same task. Juvenile mice with shrunken engrams formed precise fear memories, whereas adults with expanded engrams formed imprecise memories, like those of untreated juveniles. This confirmed that engram size is strongly linked to engram precision.

From general to precise memories

Another set of experiments further revealed that the shift from general to precise memory formation depends on the maturation of inhibitory neurons in the hippocampus, which in turn depends upon the maturation of the perineuronal net — a type of connective tissue that forms in the spaces between neurons.

Thus, juvenile mice form general memories because widely distributed engrams form in the absence of inhibitory neurons. As brain development proceeds, inhibitory neurons mature, and the perineuronal net stabilizes their connections with other hippocampal neurons. Consequently, the inhibitory neurons limit the size of new engrams, so that memories become more precise

The researchers also created genetically engineered viruses containing the gene encoding a cross-linking molecule found in the perineuronal net. Injecting this into juvenile mice accelerated the maturation of the perineuronal net so that they formed precise memories. Conversely, destabilizing the tissue in adults prevented the formation of precise memories.

Maturation of the 
perineuronal net is already known to be crucial for the proper development of the brain’s sensory pathways. In humans, the perineuronal net is thought to reach maturity at around eight years of age, and disruption of this process is implicated in conditions such as epilepsy and schizophrenia. Thus, further research could help improve our understanding of a whole range of neurodevelopmental disorders

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