4.8 Article

Unveiling the abstract format of mnemonic representations

Journal

NEURON
Volume 110, Issue 11, Pages 1822-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.03.016

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Funding

  1. National Eye Institute (NEI) [R01 EY-016407, R01 EY-027925]

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Working memory stores information for future use, bridging the gap between perception and behavior. This study finds that when a certain memory representation is useful for guiding behavior, different visual stimuli can be flexibly recoded into the same memory format. These mnemonic representations are abstractions of low-level perceptual features.
Working memory (WM) enables information storage for future use, bridging the gap between perception and behavior. We hypothesize that WM representations are abstractions of low-level perceptual features. However, the neural nature of these putative abstract representations has thus far remained impenetrable. Here, we demonstrate that distinct visual stimuli (oriented gratings and moving dots) are flexibly recoded into the same WM format in visual and parietal cortices when that representation is useful for memory-guided behavior. Specifically, the behaviorally relevant features of the stimuli (orientation and direction) were extracted and recoded into a shared mnemonic format that takes the form of an abstract line-like pattern. We conclude that mnemonic representations are abstractions of percepts that are more efficient than and proximal to the behaviors they guide.

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