主題演講摘要
梁庚辰教授 (Liang, Keng-Chen)
  Formation and expression of memory for emotional experience: From body to brain
Neurobiological theories of memory suggest that neural plasticity underlying memory storage requires not only neural activity representing the to-be-stored information, but also some nonspecific arousal inputs. This proposition is attested by the findings that affective laden experience often leaves robust memory. Extensive evidence shows that various hormones released under arousal play a critical role in facilitating storage of newly learned information. However, it is intriguing that these hormones, circulating in blood stream of periphery, have no access to the central nervous system due to the blood-brain-barrier. In the past twenty years, findings on rodents and humans from several laboratories have shed lights on this issue. Epinephrine is a hormone released from the adrenal medulla in response to an arousing event. It is elevated in circulation by learning experience. Peripheral administration of epinephrine shortly after training has biphasic effects: Medium doses enhance but high doses impair retention of the learned response. The effect is due to binding of epinephrine to peripheral receptors on the viscera, drugs antagonizing the peripheral action of epinephrine can abolish the effect. The influence is conveyed into the brain by vagal afferents, transection of the vagus attenuates the effect of epinephrine on memory. Vagal afferents innervate the nucleus of solitary tract mono-synaptically and the locus coeruleus multi-synaptically, which are implicated in visceral processing and vigilance, respectively. Suppressing these two brainstem nuclei abolishes influence of epinephrine on memory. Neurons in the two nuclei issue noradrenergic fibers to innervate widespread forebrain regions, including the amygdala and hippocampus, implicated in mnemonic function. Further studies revealed that treatments suppressing noradrenergic functions in the amygdala attenuate the memory enhancing effects of epinephrine and other peripheral humoral factors. This structure entail memory trace formed in other brain regions, such as the hippocampus or various cortical regions, modulated by emotional saliency of an event. These findings suggest that bodily feedback activated by an emotional incidence helps to forge the memory trace for that incidence, just as it helps to forge our awareness of emotion for that incidence proposed by William James and Carl Lange a century ago.