Abstract

Sustained and elevated activity during the working memory delay period has long been considered the primary neural correlate for maintaining information over short time intervals. This idea has recently been reinterpreted in light of findings generated from multiple neural recording modalities and levels of analysis. To further investigate the sustained or transient nature of activity, the temporal-spectral evolution (TSE) of delay period activity was examined in humans with high density EEG during performance of a Sternberg working memory paradigm with a relatively long six second delay and with novel scenes as stimuli. Multiple analyses were conducted using different trial window durations and different baseline periods for TSE computation. Sensor level analyses revealed transient rather than sustained activity during delay periods. Specifically, the consistent finding among the analyses was that high amplitude activity encompassing the theta range was found early in the first three seconds of the delay period. These increases in activity early in the delay period correlated positively with subsequent ability to distinguish new from old probe scenes. Source level signal estimation implicated a right parietal region of transient early delay activity that correlated positively with working memory ability. This pattern of results adds to recent evidence that transient rather than sustained delay period activity supports visual working memory performance. The findings are discussed in relation to synchronous and desynchronous intra- and inter-regional neural transmission, and choosing an optimal baseline for expressing temporal-spectral delay activity change.

Highlights

  • The ability to maintain information ‘online’ for a matter of seconds and to use this information to realize immediate goals is critical for what is known as working memory [1]

  • The first is that evidence from the temporal-spectral evolution method suggests transient rather than sustained activity during a relatively long 6 seconds delay period

  • Analysis of the temporal spectral evolution of the delay period EEG suggests that short-term visual memory maintenance involves a period of transient activity in which amplitude

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to maintain information ‘online’ for a matter of seconds and to use this information to realize immediate goals is critical for what is known as working memory [1]. While the behavioral limits of working memory, including capacity and duration, have been extensively documented [2, 3], it remains to be fully understood the neural dynamics that allow stimuli to be held in mind for short periods of time [3, 4]. Scene working memory delay activity necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health

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