4.1 Article

Reframing the debate: The distributed systems view of working memory

Journal

VISUAL COGNITION
Volume 29, Issue 7, Pages 416-424

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2021.1899091

Keywords

Working memory; sensory recruitment; visual cortex

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This response challenges Xu's claim about the non-essential role of the visual cortex in visual working memory, emphasizing the critical role of visual regions in WM. It argues for a distributed systems view of WM storage, highlighting how representations stored in various brain regions complement and interact with each other to contribute to behavior.
In her recent Opinion, Xu argues that visual cortex is non-essential for visual working memory (WM) storage. In our response, we highlight some inconsistencies that undermine Xu's claims and strengthen the notion that visual regions play a critical role in visual WM. Moreover, we contend that this framing of the debate ignores the larger point that WM storage is unlikely to be the purview of any single brain region. We outline a perspective that we term the distributed systems view, which considers WM - and storage in particular - to be distributed across multiple brain regions. This view is bolstered by evidence that a wide array of regions throughout the brain are involved in WM. Viewed in this light, the focus shifts from asking which regions are essential for WM and towards questions about how representations stored within each region complement one another, how they interact, and how they contribute to behaviour.

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