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Recovery of information from latent memory stores decreases over time

Recovery of information from latent memory stores decreases over time Working memory (WM) performance can be enhanced by an informative cue presented during storage. This effect, termed a retrocue benefit, can be used to explore how observers prioritize information stored in WM. Recent studies have demonstrated that neural representations of task-relevant memoranda are strengthened following a retrocue, suggesting that participants can supplement active memory traces with information from other memory stores. We sought to better understand these additional store(s) by asking whether they are subject to the same temporal degradation seen in active memory representations during storage. We tested this possibility by reconstructing and quantifying representations of remembered positions from EEG activity while varying the interval separating an encoding display and retrocue during a spatial WM task. We observed a significant increase in the quality of location-specific representations following a retrocue, but the magnitude of this benefit was linearly and inversely related to the timing of the retrocue such that later cues yielded smaller increases. This result suggests that participants’ ability to supplement active memory representations with information from additional memory stores is not static: the information maintained in these stores may be subject to temporal degradation, or these stores may become more difficult to access over time. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Cognitive Neuroscience Taylor & Francis

Recovery of information from latent memory stores decreases over time

Cognitive Neuroscience , Volume 11 (1-2): 10 – Apr 2, 2020

Recovery of information from latent memory stores decreases over time

Cognitive Neuroscience , Volume 11 (1-2): 10 – Apr 2, 2020

Abstract

Working memory (WM) performance can be enhanced by an informative cue presented during storage. This effect, termed a retrocue benefit, can be used to explore how observers prioritize information stored in WM. Recent studies have demonstrated that neural representations of task-relevant memoranda are strengthened following a retrocue, suggesting that participants can supplement active memory traces with information from other memory stores. We sought to better understand these additional store(s) by asking whether they are subject to the same temporal degradation seen in active memory representations during storage. We tested this possibility by reconstructing and quantifying representations of remembered positions from EEG activity while varying the interval separating an encoding display and retrocue during a spatial WM task. We observed a significant increase in the quality of location-specific representations following a retrocue, but the magnitude of this benefit was linearly and inversely related to the timing of the retrocue such that later cues yielded smaller increases. This result suggests that participants’ ability to supplement active memory representations with information from additional memory stores is not static: the information maintained in these stores may be subject to temporal degradation, or these stores may become more difficult to access over time.

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References (48)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
ISSN
1758-8936
eISSN
1758-8928
DOI
10.1080/17588928.2019.1617258
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Working memory (WM) performance can be enhanced by an informative cue presented during storage. This effect, termed a retrocue benefit, can be used to explore how observers prioritize information stored in WM. Recent studies have demonstrated that neural representations of task-relevant memoranda are strengthened following a retrocue, suggesting that participants can supplement active memory traces with information from other memory stores. We sought to better understand these additional store(s) by asking whether they are subject to the same temporal degradation seen in active memory representations during storage. We tested this possibility by reconstructing and quantifying representations of remembered positions from EEG activity while varying the interval separating an encoding display and retrocue during a spatial WM task. We observed a significant increase in the quality of location-specific representations following a retrocue, but the magnitude of this benefit was linearly and inversely related to the timing of the retrocue such that later cues yielded smaller increases. This result suggests that participants’ ability to supplement active memory representations with information from additional memory stores is not static: the information maintained in these stores may be subject to temporal degradation, or these stores may become more difficult to access over time.

Journal

Cognitive NeuroscienceTaylor & Francis

Published: Apr 2, 2020

Keywords: Working memory; selective attention; EEG

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