Literature DB >> 8670634

Dissociating verbal and spatial working memory using PET.

E E Smith1, J Jonides, R A Koeppe.   

Abstract

Three experiments used position emission tomography (PET) to study the neural basis of human working memory. These studies ask whether different neural circuits underly verbal and spatial memory. In Experiment 1, subjects had to retain for 3 sec. either the names of four letters (verbal memory) or the positions of three dots (spatial memory). The PET results manifested a clear cut double dissociation, as the verbal task activated primarily left-hemisphere regions whereas the spatial task activated only right-hemisphere regions. In Experiment 2, the identical sequence of letters was presented in all conditions, and what varied was whether subjects had to remember the names of the letters (verbal memory) or their positions in the display (spatial memory). In the verbal task, activation was concentrated more in the left than the right hemisphere; in the spatial task, there was substantial activation in both hemispheres, though in key regions, there was more activation in the right than the left hemisphere. Experiment 3 studied only verbal memory, and showed that a continuous memory task activated the same regions as the discrete verbal task used in Experiment 1. Taken together, these results indicate that verbal and spatial working memory are implemented by different neural structures.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8670634     DOI: 10.1093/cercor/6.1.11

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cereb Cortex        ISSN: 1047-3211            Impact factor:   5.357


  219 in total

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3.  Areas involved in encoding and applying directional expectations to moving objects.

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4.  Low-resolution electrical tomography of the brain during psychometrically matched verbal and spatial cognitive tasks.

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5.  The neural basis of task-switching in working memory: effects of performance and aging.

Authors:  E E Smith; A Geva; J Jonides; A Miller; P Reuter-Lorenz; R A Koeppe
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6.  Cerebral activation during multiplication: a functional MR imaging study of number processing.

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7.  Functional neuroanatomy of visuo-spatial working memory in Turner syndrome.

Authors:  M F Haberecht; V Menon; I S Warsofsky; C D White; J Dyer-Friedman; G H Glover; E K Neely; A L Reiss
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8.  Syntactic working memory and the establishment of filler-gap dependencies: insights from ERPs and fMRI.

Authors:  C J Fiebach; M Schlesewsky; A D Friederici
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9.  Neural basis for sentence comprehension: grammatical and short-term memory components.

Authors:  Ayanna Cooke; Edgar B Zurif; Christian DeVita; David Alsop; Phyllis Koenig; John Detre; James Gee; Maria Pinãngo; Jennifer Balogh; Murray Grossman
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 5.038

10.  The roles of prefrontal brain regions in components of working memory: effects of memory load and individual differences.

Authors:  B Rypma; M D'Esposito
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-05-25       Impact factor: 11.205

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