Stimulus-Specific Delay Activity in Human Primary Visual Cortex
University of California San Diego
Abstract
Working memory (WM) involves maintaining information in an on-line state. One emerging view is that information in WM is maintained via sensory recruitment, such that information is stored via sustained activity in the sensory areas that encode the to-be-remembered information. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we observed that key sensory regions such as primary visual cortex (V1) showed little evidence of sustained increases in mean activation during a WM delay period, though such amplitude increases have typically been used to determine whether a region is involved in on-line maintenance. However, a multivoxel pattern analysis of delay-period activity revealed a sustained pattern of activation in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 16.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Sensory system
- Stimulus (psychology)
- Psychology
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging
- Neuroscience
- Visual cortex
- Sensory cortex
- Sensory memory
- Reduced inequalities