Publication | Open Access
Induced gamma-band activity during the delay of a visual short-term memory task in humans.
837
Citations
34
References
1998
Year
NeuropsychologyNeurolinguisticsBrain OrganizationAttentionVisual Cognitive NeuroscienceGamma-band ActivitySocial SciencesNeurodynamicsVisual CognitionMemoryWorking MemoryCognitive ElectrophysiologyFrontal ElectrodesNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceVisual ProcessingVisual ObjectsVisual FunctionOscillatory ModeEeg Signal ProcessingNeuroscience
Visual objects are hypothesized to be represented by a distributed gamma‑band (20‑80 Hz) synchronized network centered on prefrontal and ventral visual areas. The study tests whether sustained gamma‑band activity appears during the delay of a delayed‑matching‑to‑sample task, as would be expected if gamma synchrony underlies object representation in short‑term memory. EEG was recorded while subjects performed the task, and the authors also analyzed alpha‑band (15‑20 Hz) activity and averaged evoked potentials. Induced gamma‑band activity appeared during the delay, peaked at occipitotemporal and frontal sites, was absent when no memorization was required, and differed in timing and topography from alpha and evoked responses, suggesting it reflects rehearsal of an object representation in short‑term memory.
It has been hypothesized that visual objects could be represented in the brain by a distributed cell assembly synchronized on an oscillatory mode in the gamma-band (20-80 Hz). If this hypothesis is correct, then oscillatory gamma-band activity should appear in any task requiring the activation of an object representation, and in particular when an object representation is held active in short-term memory: sustained gamma-band activity is thus expected during the delay of a delayed-matching-to-sample task. EEG was recorded while subjects performed such a task. Induced (e.g., appearing with a jitter in latency from one trial to the next) gamma-band activity was observed during the delay. In a control task, in which no memorization was required, this activity disappeared. Furthermore, this gamma-band activity during the rehearsal of the first stimulus representation in short-term memory peaked at both occipitotemporal and frontal electrodes. This topography fits with the idea of a synchronized cortical network centered on prefrontal and ventral visual areas. Activities in the alpha band, in the 15-20 Hz band, and in the averaged evoked potential were also analyzed. The gamma-band activity during the delay can be distinguished from all of these other components of the response, on the basis of either its variations or its topography. It thus seems to be a specific functional component of the response that could correspond to the rehearsal of an object representation in short-term memory.
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