ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2026, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (3): 499-514.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2026.0499 cstr: 32111.14.2026.0499

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

前额叶-海马-内侧隔核环路的theta-gamma相位幅值耦合: 跨脑区协同与工作记忆调控机制

张秋霞, 陈伟海   

  1. 西南大学心理学部; 认知与人格教育部重点实验室, 重庆 400715
  • 收稿日期:2025-05-17 出版日期:2026-03-15 发布日期:2026-01-07
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金面上项目(32371133); 西南大学中央高校基本科研业务费专项资金项目资金(SWU2409 103)资助

Theta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling in the prefrontal-hippocampal- medial septal circuit: Mechanisms of cross-regional coordination and working memory regulation

ZHANG Qiuxia, CHEN Weihai   

  1. Faculty of psychology, southwest University; Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality, Ministry of Education, Chongqing 400715, China
  • Received:2025-05-17 Online:2026-03-15 Published:2026-01-07

摘要: 工作记忆作为高级认知功能的核心, 依赖于前额叶-海马-内侧隔核神经环路的动态协同, 其中theta-gamma相位幅值耦合(TG-PAC)是跨脑区信息整合的关键机制。本文系统阐述了前额叶-海马-内侧隔核神经环路中theta-gamma相位幅值耦合在工作记忆中的核心调控作用。研究表明, 前额叶通过持续性神经活动维持工作记忆中的信息表征, 其theta振荡(4~8 Hz)通过相位调制gamma活动(30~80 Hz)形成认知控制的神经时间窗。海马作为空间信息处理的枢纽, 通过theta-gamma嵌套编码实现空间导航与工作记忆绑定, 其局部gamma振荡与theta振荡的耦合强度可预测记忆容量与行为表现。前额叶theta相位与海马gamma幅值的跨脑区耦合, 构成了认知控制与记忆存储的动态交互界面, 确保工作记忆任务的精准执行。内侧隔核作为关键中继节点, 其胆碱能、GABA能神经元通过调控海马theta振荡, 影响海马theta-gamma相位幅值耦合的强度与时空特性, 进而调节工作记忆效能。此外, TG-PAC异常与精神分裂症、阿尔茨海默病等认知功能障碍密切相关, 提示其作为潜在生物标志物和神经调控靶点的临床价值。本文创新性整合前额叶-海马-内侧隔核三节点环路之间的theta-gamma相位幅值耦合, 并展望未来研究需结合多模态成像、细胞特异性调控与计算建模, 以推动基于神经振荡耦合的认知障碍干预新策略。

关键词: 工作记忆, theta-gamma相位幅值耦合, 交叉节律耦合, 前额叶, 海马, 内侧隔核

Abstract: Working memory, as a core component of higher-order cognitive functions, its neural basis involves the dynamic coordination mechanisms among distributed neural networks. Although the functions of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and hippocampus in working memory have been intensively investigated, the neural mechanisms underlying cross-brain region information integration, especially the role of key sub-cortical structures in this process, still await systematic elucidation. This review aims to address a crucial scientific question: As a key hub between the PFC and hippocampus, how does the medial septal nucleus (MS) regulate working memory through the theta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling mechanism and thus mediate the information transmission process in the PFC-hippocampal-MS three-node circuit? Based on this, we propose and elaborate on an innovative “three-node coordination model”. This model systematically integrates the MS into the classical PFC-hippocampus working memory framework for the first time and identifies theta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling as the core electrophysiological mechanism for achieving cross-brain region coordination.
By integrating evidence from neuroanatomical and functional studies, this research has established that the MS is not merely a simple information relay station but an active regulatory hub within the working memory circuit. In terms of neural connectivity architecture, the MS has direct synaptic connections with both the PFC and hippocampus. This unique neural connectivity enables the MS with an irreplaceable role in coordinating the activities of the PFC and hippocampus. At the functional mechanism level, GABAergic neurons in the MS exhibit distinct theta-frequency burst firing characteristics and are considered the pacemaker source of the hippocampal theta rhythm. Applying “theta rhythm stimulation” to the MS using optogenetic techniques can effectively enhance the power of hippocampal theta oscillations and significantly improve the behavioral performance of spatial working memory. These causal findings comprehensively demonstrate the indispensability of the MS in working memory information processing.
Theta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling serves as the fundamental neural coding mechanism for information integration in the three-node circuit. Specifically, theta oscillations provide a global temporal reference framework for cross-brain region information transmission, while gamma oscillations act as local information representation units nested within specific theta phases. There is a complex bidirectional theta-gamma phase-amplitude regulatory process between the PFC and hippocampal circuits. During the information encoding stage of working memory, the hippocampus transmits environmental information to the PFC. During the working memory decision-making stage, the PFC exerts top-down executive control over the hippocampus. Both of these processes are mediated by theta-gamma coupling. The MS profoundly influences the strength and spatio-temporal characteristics of hippocampal theta-gamma coupling by regulating the hippocampal theta rhythm. Meanwhile, the feedback loop of somatostatin-positive interneurons in the hippocampus enables dynamic fine-tuning to prevent excessive network synchronization. This multi-level regulatory mechanism solidifies the central position of the MS in neural information integration. Moreover, abnormal theta-gamma coupling in the PFC-hippocampal-MS circuit is closely associated with cognitive deficits in various neuropsychiatric disorders.
In summary, this study has established the critical regulatory role of the MS during the maintenance phase of working memory, clarified its mechanism of controlling the hippocampal theta rhythm via the GABAergic pathway; revealed the neural pathway through which the MS, as a theta oscillation regulatory hub, influences local hippocampal activity and thereby regulates overall working memory efficiency; and constructed a “PFC-hippocampal-MS three-node circuit model”, which for the first time systematically incorporates the MS into the working memory theoretical framework. Future research should combine multimodal neuroimaging, cell-specific regulation, and computational modeling approaches to delve deeper into the functional connectivity between the PFC and MS and the dynamic characteristics of theta-gamma coupling, providing a theoretical foundation for promoting intervention strategies for cognitive impairments based on neural oscillations.

Key words: working memory, θ-γ, phase amplitude coupling, cross-frequency coupling, prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, medial Septal neural