4.3 Article

Neural correlates of schema-dependent episodic memory and association with behavioral flexibility in autism spectrum disorders and typical development

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出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s11689-021-09388-9

关键词

Behavioral flexibility; Medial temporal lobe; fMRI; Associative memory; Prefrontal cortex; Executive function

资金

  1. National Center For Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [TL1TR001431]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NIH1U54HD090257, K23MH110612]

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Our study in TD children and ASD groups showed that memory was strongest for schema-congruent object-scene pairs, followed by intermediate pairs, and lowest for schema-incongruent pairs. The trade-off between mPFC and MTL in TD children differed from adult reports, with mPFC supporting memory for intermediate schema-congruency and left anterior MTL supporting memory for schema-congruent pairs. In ASD, mPFC engagement interacted with flexibility, with activation supporting memory for intermediate schema-congruency varying with reported flexibility and being higher in more flexible individuals. Similar interactions were observed in the left dorsolateral and rostrolateral PFC in whole-brain analysis.
Background Conceptual knowledge frameworks termed schemas facilitate memory formation and are posited to support flexible behavior. In adults, the medial temporal lobe (MTL) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) trade-off in supporting schema-based memory formation, such that encoding of subsequently remembered schema-congruent information relies on mPFC, whereas schema-incongruent information relies on MTL. Whether this is true in the immature brain and relates to behavioral flexibility is unknown. In this preliminary investigation, we aimed to replicate the adult findings in typically developing (TD) children and to investigate the relevance to behavioral flexibility by examining a disorder with pathognomonic behavioral rigidity, autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Methods Children completed an associative subsequent memory paradigm, encoding object-scene pairs in an MRI scanner and subsequently completing a recognition test outside the scanner after a delay. Recognition performance was back sorted to construct remembered vs forgotten contrasts. One-way ANOVAS were conducted in MTL and mPFC masks for schema-congruency, followed by congruency by flexibility scores. Exploratory analyses were then conducted within the whole brain. Results As reported in adults, episodic memory was strongest for schema-congruent object-scene pairs, followed by intermediate pairs, and lowest for schema-incongruent pairs in both TD and ASD groups. However, the trade-off between mPFC and MTL in TD children differed from adult reports such that mPFC supported memory for intermediate schema-congruency and left anterior MTL supported memory for schema-congruent pairs. In ASD, mPFC engagement interacted with flexibility such that activation supporting memory for intermediate schema-congruency varied with parent-reported flexibility and was higher in those with more flexible behavior. A similar interaction was also observed in both the left dorsolateral and rostrolateral PFC in whole-brain analysis. Conclusion Our findings provide the first preliminary evidence for the association of schema-based episodic memory formation and behavioral flexibility, an executive function impaired in multiple developmental disorders. Upon replication, this line of research holds promise for memory-based interventions addressing executive problems of behavioral rigidity.

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