The Cognitive Neuroscience of Working Memory
University of California, Berkeley · University of Wisconsin–Madison
Abstract
For more than 50 years, psychologists and neuroscientists have recognized the importance of a working memory to coordinate processing when multiple goals are active and to guide behavior with information that is not present in the immediate environment. In recent years, psychological theory and cognitive neuroscience data have converged on the idea that information is encoded into working memory by allocating attention to internal representations, whether semantic long-term memory (e.g., letters, digits, words), sensory, or motoric. Thus, information-based multivariate analyses of human functional MRI data typically find evidence for the temporary representation of stimuli in regions that also process this…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 39.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 180
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Mnemonic
- Psychology
- Working memory
- Cognitive neuroscience
- Cognitive psychology
- Semantic memory
- Salience (neuroscience)
- Neuroscience