Neural dynamics of reselecting visual and motor contents in working memory after external interference.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of Neuroscience Pub Date : 2025-03-17 DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2347-24.2025
Daniela Gresch, Larissa Behnke, Freek van Ede, Anna C Nobre, Sage E P Boettcher
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Abstract

In everyday tasks, we must often shift our focus away from internal representations held in working memory to engage with perceptual events in the external world. Here, we investigated how our internal focus is reestablished following an interrupting task by tracking the reselection of visual representations and their associated action plans in working memory. Specifically, we ask whether reselection occurs for both visual and motor memory attributes and when this reselection occurs. We developed a visual-motor working-memory task in which participants were retrospectively cued to select one of two memory items before being interrupted by a perceptual discrimination task. To determine what information was reselected, the memory items had distinct visual and motor attributes. To determine when internal representations were reselected, the interrupting task was presented at one of three distinct time points following the retro-cue. We employed electroencephalography time-frequency analyses to track the initial selection and later reselection of visual and motor representations, as operationalized through modulations of posterior alpha (8-12 Hz) activity relative to the memorized item location (visual) and of central beta (13-30 Hz) activity relative to the required response hand (motor). Our results showed that internal visual and motor contents were concurrently reselected immediately after completing the interrupting task, rather than only when internal information was required for memory-guided behavior. Thus, following interruption, we swiftly resume our internal focus in working memory through the simultaneous reselection of memorized visual representations and their associated action plans, thereby restoring internal contents to a ready-to-use state.Significance statement A key challenge for working memory is to maintain past visual representations and their associated actions while engaging with the external environment. Our cognitive system must, therefore, often juggle multiple tasks within a common time frame. Despite the ubiquity of multi-task situations in everyday life, working memory has predominantly been studied devoid of additional perceptual, attentional, and response demands during the retention interval. Here, we investigate the neural dynamics of returning to internal contents following task-relevant interruptions. Particularly, we identify which attributes of internal representations are reselected and when this reselection occurs. Our findings demonstrate that both visual and motor contents are reselected immediately and in tandem after completion of an external, interrupting task.

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外部干扰后工作记忆中视觉和运动内容重选的神经动力学。
在日常任务中,我们必须经常将注意力从工作记忆中的内部表征转移到外部世界的感知事件上。在这里,我们通过跟踪工作记忆中视觉表征的重新选择及其相关的行动计划,研究了我们的内部焦点是如何在中断任务后重新建立的。具体来说,我们想知道视觉和运动记忆属性是否会发生重选,以及这种重选发生的时间。我们开发了一个视觉-运动-工作记忆任务,在这个任务中,参与者在被知觉辨别任务打断之前,被回顾性地提示从两个记忆项目中选择一个。为了确定哪些信息被重新选择,记忆项目具有不同的视觉和运动属性。为了确定何时重新选择内部表征,中断任务在回溯提示后的三个不同时间点之一呈现。我们采用脑电图时间-频率分析来跟踪视觉和运动表征的初始选择和后来的重新选择,通过调节相对于记忆的项目位置(视觉)的后验α (8-12 Hz)活动和相对于所需的反应手(运动)的中央β (13-30 Hz)活动来操作。我们的研究结果表明,在完成中断任务后,内部视觉和运动内容同时被重新选择,而不是只有在记忆引导行为需要内部信息时才被重新选择。因此,在中断之后,我们通过同时重新选择记忆的视觉表征及其相关的行动计划,迅速恢复工作记忆中的内部焦点,从而将内部内容恢复到准备使用的状态。工作记忆的一个关键挑战是在与外部环境接触的同时保持过去的视觉表征及其相关行为。因此,我们的认知系统必须经常在一个共同的时间框架内处理多个任务。尽管日常生活中多任务情境无处不在,但工作记忆的研究主要是在保留间隔期间缺乏额外的感知、注意和反应需求。在这里,我们研究了在任务相关中断后返回内部内容的神经动力学。特别是,我们确定了内部表示的哪些属性被重新选择以及何时进行重新选择。我们的研究结果表明,视觉和运动内容都是在完成外部中断任务后立即和串联重新选择的。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
3.80%
发文量
1164
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: JNeurosci (ISSN 0270-6474) is an official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. It is published weekly by the Society, fifty weeks a year, one volume a year. JNeurosci publishes papers on a broad range of topics of general interest to those working on the nervous system. Authors now have an Open Choice option for their published articles
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