4.7 Article

Prospection of Potential Actions during Visual Working Memory Starts Early, Is Flexible, and Predicts Behavior

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 43, Issue 49, Pages 8515-8524

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0709-23.2023

Keywords

action planning; EEG; neural oscillations; visual working memory

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In order for visual working memory to serve future behavior, it is important to prepare for the potential use of working memory contents ahead of time. Recent studies show that the planning for upcoming manual actions starts early after visual encoding and occurs alongside visual retention. This study explores whether such output planning in visual working memory can flexibly adapt to different visual-motor mappings, and if it occurs even for actions that may only potentially become relevant for behavior.
For visual working memory to serve upcoming behavior, it is crucial that we prepare for the potential use of working-memory contents ahead of time. Recent studies have demonstrated how the prospection and planning for an upcoming manual action starts early after visual encoding, and occurs alongside visual retention. Here, we address whether such output planning in visual working memory flexibly adapts to different visual-motor mappings, and occurs even when an upcoming action will only potentially become relevant for behavior. Human participants (female and male) performed a visual-motor working memory task in which they remembered one or two colored oriented bars for later (potential) use. We linked, and counterbalanced, the tilt of the visual items to specific manual responses. This allowed us to track planning of upcoming behavior through contralateral attenuation of b band activity, a canonical motor-cortical EEG signature of manual-action planning. The results revealed how action encoding and subsequent planning alongside visual working memory (1) reflect anticipated task demands rather than specific visual-motor mappings, (2) occur even for actions that will only potentially become relevant for behavior, and (3) are associated with faster performance for the encoded item, at the expense of performance to other working-memory content. This reveals how the potential prospective use of visual working memory content is flexibly planned early on, with consequences for the speed of memory-guided behavior.

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