| Literature DB >> 24828642 |
Kristjan Kalm1, Dennis Norris2.
Abstract
Here we investigate how order information is represented in auditory-verbal short-term memory (STM). We used fMRI and a serial recall task to dissociate neural activity patterns representing the phonological properties of the items stored in STM from the patterns representing their order. For this purpose, we analyzed fMRI activity patterns elicited by different item sets and different orderings of those items. These fMRI activity patterns were compared with the predictions made by positional and chaining models of serial order. The positional models encode associations between items and their positions in a sequence, whereas the chaining models encode associations between successive items and retain no position information. We show that a set of brain areas in the postero-dorsal stream of auditory processing store associations between items and order as predicted by a positional model. The chaining model of order representation generates a different pattern similarity prediction, which was shown to be inconsistent with the fMRI data. Our results thus favor a neural model of order representation that stores item codes, position codes, and the mapping between them. This study provides the first fMRI evidence for a specific model of order representation in the human brain.Entities:
Keywords: short-term memory; temporal order; working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24828642 PMCID: PMC4019801 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4104-13.2014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167