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Spatial versus Object Working Memory: PET Investigations

513

Citations

28

References

1995

Year

TLDR

The study used PET to determine whether working memory is unitary or consists of separate buffers for spatial and object information. The authors conducted three experiments: two PET studies comparing spatial and object memory tasks (with identical stimuli in Experiment 2) and a behavioral study, each designed to elicit a double dissociation between spatial and object memory. Results showed a consistent double dissociation: spatial memory activated right‑hemisphere occipital, parietal, and prefrontal regions, while object memory activated left‑hemisphere inferotemporal and parietal areas, and behavioral performance mirrored this pattern.

Abstract

Abstract We used positron emission tomography (PET) to answer the following question: Is working memory a unitary storage system, or does it instead include different storage buffers for different kinds of information? In Experiment 1, PET measures were taken while subjects engaged in either a spatial-memory task (retain the position of three dots for 3 sec) or an object-memory task (retain the identity of two objects for 3 sec). The results manifested a striking double dissociation, as the spatial task activated only right-hemisphere regions, whereas the object task activated primarily left-hemisphere regions. The spatial (right-hemisphere) regions included occipital, parietal, and prefrontal areas, while the object (left-hemisphere) regions included inferotemporal and parietal areas. Experiment 2 was similar to Experiment 1 except that the stimuli and trial events were identical for the spatial and object tasks; whether spatial or object memory was required was manipulated by instructions. The PET results once more showed a double dissociation, as the spatial task activated primarily right-hemisphere regions (again including occipital, parietal and prefrontal areas), whereas the object task activated only left-hemisphere regions (again including inferotemporal and parietal areas). Experiment 3 was a strictly behavioral study, which produced another double dissociation. It used the same tasks as Experiment 2, and showed that a variation in spatial similarity affected performance in the spatial but not the object task, whereas a variation in shape similarity affected performance in the object but not the spatial task. Taken together, the results of the three experiments clearly imply that different working-memory buffers are used for storing spatial and object information.

References

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