Literature DB >> 33257529

The Role of Location-Context Binding in Nonspatial Visual Working Memory.

Ying Cai1,2, Jacqueline M Fulvio3, Qing Yu3, Andrew D Sheldon4,2, Bradley R Postle5,2.   

Abstract

Successful retrieval of an item from visual working memory (VWM) often requires an associated representation of the trial-unique context in which that item was presented. In experiment 1, fMRI of 16 male and female humans replicated a previous dissociation of the effects of manipulating memory load in comparison to the effects of manipulating context binding, by comparing VWM for one oriented line versus for three lines individuated by their location versus for three "heterogeneous" items drawn from different categories (orientation, color, and luminance): delay-period fMRI signal in frontal cortex and intraparietal sulcus (IPS) was sensitive to stimulus homogeneity rather than to memory load per se. Additionally, inspection of behavioral performance revealed a broad range of individual differences in the probability of responses to nontargets (also known as "swap errors"), and a post hoc comparison of high swap-error versus low swap-error groups generated several intriguing results: at recall, high swap-error subjects were seen to represent both the orientation and the location of the probed item less strongly, and with less differentiation from nonprobed items, and delay-period signal in IPS predicted behavioral and neural correlates of context binding at recall. In experiment 2, which was a preregistered replication, the 27 male and female humans were grouped into low and high swap-error groups by median split, and the results were broadly consistent with experiment 1. These results present a neural correlate of swap errors, and suggest that delay-period activity of the IPS may be more important for the operation of context binding than for representation per se of stimulus identity.
Copyright © 2020 Cai et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  fMRI

Year:  2020        PMID: 33257529      PMCID: PMC7773890          DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0430-20.2020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  eNeuro        ISSN: 2373-2822


  33 in total

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9.  Evaluating and excluding swap errors in analogue tests of working memory.

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