Publication | Open Access
Priority Switches in Visual Working Memory are Supported by Frontal Delta and Posterior Alpha Interactions
115
Citations
68
References
2018
Year
Posterior Alpha LateralizationCognitionAttentionVisual Cognitive NeuroscienceSocial SciencesEarly VisionMemory RepresentationsVisual CognitionMemoryWorking MemoryCognitive ElectrophysiologyCognitive NeurosciencePriority SwitchesCognitive ScienceTask PerformanceVisual Working MemoryVisual ProcessingVisual FunctionNeuroscienceFrontal Delta
Visual working memory (VWM) distinguishes between representations relevant for imminent versus future perceptual goals. We investigated how the brain sequentially prioritizes visual working memory representations that serve consecutive tasks. Observers remembered two targets for a sequence of two visual search tasks, thus making one target currently relevant, and the other prospectively relevant. We show that during the retention interval prior to the first search, lateralized parieto-occipital EEG alpha (8-14 Hz) suppression is stronger for current compared with prospective search targets. Crucially, between the first and second search task, this difference in posterior alpha lateralization reverses, reflecting the change in priority states of the two target representations. Connectivity analyses indicate that this switch in posterior alpha lateralization is driven by frontal delta/low-theta (2-6 Hz) activity. Moreover, this frontal low-frequency signal also predicts task performance after the switch. We thus obtained evidence for large-scale network interactions underlying the flexible shifting between the priority states of multiple memory representations in VWM.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1