4.5 Article

Working Memory: How Important Is White Matter?

Journal

NEUROSCIENTIST
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 197-210

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1073858416634298

Keywords

working memory; white matter; axonal density; diffusion imaging; working memory capacity

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [R21-MH085228]

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Working memory, the ability to transiently keep, process, and use information as part of ongoing mental processes is an essential feature of cognitive functioning. The largest number of items that people can hold in their working memory, referred to as the capacity of working memory, is limited and varies substantially among individuals. Uncovering the biological factors that underlie these two defining properties of working memory capacity remains a key undertaking of modern cognitive neuroscience since capacity strongly predicts how well we reason, learn, and even do math. In this work we review data that highlights the role white matter, which provides the wiring of the extensive neural networks that activate during working memory tasks, may play in interindividual variations in capacity. We also describe advanced diffusion imaging methods, which may be uniquely suited in capturing those white matter features that are most relevant to capacity. Finally, we discuss several possible mechanisms through which white matter may both contribute to and limit working memory.

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