| Literature DB >> 25641043 |
Robert M Chapman1, Margaret N Gardner2, Mark Mapstone3, Haley M Dupree2, Inga M Antonsdottir2.
Abstract
Brain event-related potentials (ERPs) offer a quantitative link between neurophysiological activity and cognitive performance. ERPs were measured while young adults performed a task that required storing a relevant stimulus in short-term memory. Using principal components analysis, ERP component C250 (maximum at 250 ms post-stimulus) was extracted from a set of ERPs that were separately averaged for various task conditions, including stimulus relevancy and stimulus sequence within a trial. C250 was more positive in response to task-specific stimuli that were successfully stored in short-term memory. This relationship between C250 and short-term memory storage of a stimulus was confirmed by a memory probe recall test where the behavioral recall of a stimulus was highly correlated with its C250 amplitude. ERP component P300 (and its subcomponents of P3a and P3b, which are commonly thought to represent memory operations) did not show a pattern of activation reflective of storing task-relevant stimuli. C250 precedes the P300, indicating that initial short-term memory storage may occur earlier than previously believed. Additionally, because C250 is so strongly predictive of a stimulus being stored in short-term memory, C250 may provide a strong index of early memory operations.Entities:
Keywords: C250; P300; P3a; P3b; Principal components analysis (PCA); Short-term memory storage
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25641043 PMCID: PMC4524323 DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2015.01.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res ISSN: 0006-8993 Impact factor: 3.252