4.7 Article

Decoding the Contents of Visual Short-Term Memory from Human Visual and Parietal Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 38, Pages 12983-12989

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0184-12.2012

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Funding

  1. Bernstein Computational Neuroscience Program of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [01GQ0411]
  2. Excellence Initiative of the German Federal Ministry of Education
  3. German Research Foundation [GSC86/1-2009, HA 5336/1-1]

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How content is stored in the human brain during visual short-term memory (VSTM) is still an open question. Different theories postulate storage of remembered stimuli in prefrontal, parietal, or visual areas. Aiming at a distinction between these theories, we investigated the content-specificity of BOLD signals from various brain regions during a VSTM task using multivariate pattern classification. To participate in memory maintenance, candidate regions would need to have information about the different contents held in memory. We identified two brain regions where local patterns of fMRI signals represented the remembered content. Apart from the previously established storage in visual areas, we also discovered an area in the posterior parietal cortex where activity patterns allowed us to decode the specific stimuli held in memory. Our results demonstrate that storage in VSTM extends beyond visual areas, but no frontal regions were found. Thus, while frontal and parietal areas typically coactivate during VSTM, maintenance of content in the frontoparietal network might be limited to parietal cortex.

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