3.8 Article

Tracking the time-course of attentional involvement in spatial working memory: an event-related potential investigation

Journal

COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 61-69

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0926-6410(02)00216-1

Keywords

working memory; attention; ERPs; extrastriate activity

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Spatial working memory is a cognitive brain mechanism that enables the temporary maintenance and manipulation of spatial information. Recent neuroimaging and behavioral studies have led to the proposal that directed spatial attention is the mechanism by which location information is maintained in spatial working memory. Yet it is unclear whether attentional involvement is required throughout the period of active maintenance or is only invoked during, discrete task-phases such as mnemonic encoding. In the Current study, we aimed to track the time-course of attentional involvement during spatial working memory by recording event-related brain potentials (ERPs) from healthy volunteers. In Experiment 1, subjects performed a delayed-recognition task. Each trial began with the presentation of a brief stimulus (S1) that indicated the relevant location that subjects were to maintain in working memory. A 4.8-5.3 sec delay interval followed during which a single task-irrelevant probe was presented. The delay interval concluded with a test item (S2) to which subjects made a response indicating whether the S2-location was the same as the SI-memory location. To determine if attention was differentially engaged during discrete phases of the trial, task-irrelevant probes were presented early (400-800 msec following S1-offset) or late (2600-3000 msec following S1-offset) during the delay interval. Sensory-evoked ERPs (PI and NI) elicited by these irrelevant probes showed attention-like modulations with greater amplitude responses for probes occurring at the S I-memory locations in comparison to probes presented at other locations. This pattern was obtained for bothearly- and late-delay probes. Probe-evoked activity during delayed-recognition trials was similar to activity observed when spatial attention was explicitly focused on a location in visual space (Experiment 2). These results are consistent with a model of spatial working memory in which perceptual level selective attention is utilized throughout the entire period of active maintenance to keep relevant spatial information in mind. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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