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首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Human Neuroscience >Gestures make memories, but what kind? Patients with impaired procedural memory display disruptions in gesture production and comprehension
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Gestures make memories, but what kind? Patients with impaired procedural memory display disruptions in gesture production and comprehension

机译:手势可以让人留下回忆,但是什么样的呢?程序记忆障碍的患者的手势产生和理解能力受到破坏

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摘要

Hand gesture, a ubiquitous feature of human interaction, facilitates communication. Gesture also facilitates new learning, benefiting speakers and listeners alike. Thus, gestures must impact cognition beyond simply supporting the expression of already-formed ideas. However, the cognitive and neural mechanisms supporting the effects of gesture on learning and memory are largely unknown. We hypothesized that gesture's ability to drive new learning is supported by procedural memory and that procedural memory deficits will disrupt gesture production and comprehension. We tested this proposal in patients with intact declarative memory, but impaired procedural memory as a consequence of Parkinson's disease (PD), and healthy comparison participants with intact declarative and procedural memory. In separate experiments, we manipulated the gestures participants saw and produced in a Tower of Hanoi (TOH) paradigm. In the first experiment, participants solved the task either on a physical board, requiring high arching movements to manipulate the discs from peg to peg, or on a computer, requiring only flat, sideways movements of the mouse. When explaining the task, healthy participants with intact procedural memory displayed evidence of their previous experience in their gestures, producing higher, more arching hand gestures after solving on a physical board, and smaller, flatter gestures after solving on a computer. In the second experiment, healthy participants who saw high arching hand gestures in an explanation prior to solving the task subsequently moved the mouse with significantly higher curvature than those who saw smaller, flatter gestures prior to solving the task. These patterns were absent in both gesture production and comprehension experiments in patients with procedural memory impairment. These findings suggest that the procedural memory system supports the ability of gesture to drive new learning.
机译:手势是人类互动的普遍特征,有助于交流。手势还可以促进新的学习,使演讲者和听众都受益。因此,手势必须影响认知,而​​不仅仅是简单地支持已经形成的想法的表达。然而,很大程度上未知支持手势对学习和记忆的影响的认知和神经机制。我们假设程序记忆支持手势驱动新学习的能力,而程序记忆缺陷会破坏手势的产生和理解。我们在完整的声明性记忆但由于帕金森氏病(PD)导致程序记忆受损的患者以及具有完整的声明性和程序记忆的健康比较参与者中测试了该建议。在单独的实验中,我们操纵了参与者在河内塔(TOH)范式中看到并产生的手势。在第一个实验中,参与者可以在物理板上要求高拱形运动来操纵光盘从一个钉到另一个钉,或者在计算机上完成此任务,而只需要鼠标横向移动即可。在解释任务时,具有完整程序记忆的健康参与者会展示其以前的手势经验,在物理板上求解后会产生更高,更拱形的手势,而在计算机上求解后会产生较小,更平坦的手势。在第二个实验中,健康的参与者在解决任务之前在解释中看到了高拱形手势,随后移动鼠标的曲率要比在解决任务之前看到较小,更平坦的手势的人高得多。在程序记忆障碍患者的手势产生和理解实验中都没有这些模式。这些发现表明程序存储系统支持手势驱动新学习的能力。

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