4.5 Article

Visual Short-Term Memory for Coherent and Sequential Motion: A rTMS Investigation

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11111471

Keywords

visual short-term memory; repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; visual memory precision; serial memory effects

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Lincoln
  2. [2016/2017]

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The study investigated the role of hMT+ in memory encoding and storage of moving sequences, showing worse performance in middle positions. rTMS applied during the early phase impaired both recognition accuracy and precision of the retained motion direction. The findings support a model of visual short-term memory with variable resolution for each stored item, linked to memory resources and functional integrity of hMT+.
We investigated the role of the human medio-temporal complex (hMT+) in the memory encoding and storage of a sequence of four coherently moving random dot kinematograms (RDKs), by applying repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) during an early or late phase of the retention interval. Moreover, in a second experiment, we also tested whether disrupting the functional integrity of hMT+ during the early phase impaired the precision of the encoded motion directions. Overall, results showed that both recognition accuracy and precision were worse in middle serial positions, suggesting the occurrence of primacy and recency effects. We found that rTMS delivered during the early (but not the late) phase of the retention interval was able to impair not only recognition of RDKs, but also the precision of the retained motion direction. However, such impairment occurred only for RDKs presented in middle positions along the presented sequence, where performance was already closer to chance level. Altogether these findings suggest an involvement of hMT+ in the memory encoding of visual motion direction. Given that both position sequence and rTMS modulated not only recognition but also the precision of the stored information, these findings are in support of a model of visual short-term memory with a variable resolution of each stored item, consistent with the assigned amount of memory resources, and that such item-specific memory resolution is supported by the functional integrity of area hMT+.

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