4.5 Article

Multivariate patterns and long-range temporal correlations of alpha oscillations are associated with flexible manipulation of visual working memory representations

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 54, 期 9, 页码 7260-7273

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15486

关键词

alpha resting-state; electroencephalogram (EEG); neuronal oscillations; retro-cues; working memory (WM)

资金

  1. Graduate School Goldsmiths, University of London
  2. Fundacao Bial
  3. British Academy
  4. National Research University Higher School of Economics (Russian Federation)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Individual differences in utilizing retrospective cues in working memory tasks may be associated with brain oscillatory activity at rest. Behavioral flexibility is defined as the ability to effectively use or disregard retrospective cues as required.
The ability to flexibly manipulate memory representations is embedded in visual working memory (VWM) and can be tested using paradigms with retrospective cues. Although valid retrospective cues often facilitate memory recall, invalid ones may or may not result in performance costs. We investigated individual differences in utilising retrospective cues and evaluated how these individual differences are associated with brain oscillatory activity at rest. At the behavioural level, we operationalised flexibility as the ability to make effective use of retrospective cues or disregard them if required. At the neural level, we tested whether individual differences in such flexibility were associated with properties of resting-state alpha oscillatory activity (8-12 Hz). To capture distinct aspects of these brain oscillations, we evaluated their power spectral density and temporal dynamics using long-range temporal correlations (LRTCs). In addition, we performed multivariate patterns analysis (MVPA) to classify individuals' level of behavioural flexibility based on these neural measures. We observed that alpha power alone (magnitude) at rest was not associated with flexibility. However, we found that the participants' ability to manipulate VWM representations was correlated with alpha LRTC and could be decoded using MVPA on patterns of alpha power. Our findings suggest that alpha LRTC and multivariate patterns of alpha power at rest may underlie some of the individual differences in using retrospective cues in working memory tasks.

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