Standage Dominic, Paré Martin
Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen's University , Kingston, Ontario , Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Oct 1;120(4):1945-1961. doi: 10.1152/jn.00778.2017. Epub 2018 Jun 27.
For the past decade, research on the storage limitations of working memory has been dominated by two fundamentally different hypotheses. On the one hand, the contents of working memory may be stored in a limited number of "slots," each with a fixed resolution. On the other hand, any number of items may be stored but with decreasing resolution. These two hypotheses have been invaluable in characterizing the computational structure of working memory, but neither provides a complete account of the available experimental data or speaks to the neural basis of the limitations it characterizes. To address these shortcomings, we simulated a multiple-item working memory task with a cortical network model, the cellular resolution of which allowed us to quantify the coding fidelity of memoranda as a function of memory load, as measured by the discriminability, regularity, and reliability of simulated neural spiking. Our simulations account for a wealth of neural and behavioral data from human and nonhuman primate studies, and they demonstrate that feedback inhibition lowers both capacity and coding fidelity. Because the strength of inhibition scales with the number of items stored by the network, increasing this number progressively lowers fidelity until capacity is reached. Crucially, the model makes specific, testable predictions for neural activity on multiple-item working memory tasks. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Working memory is the ability to keep information in mind and is fundamental to cognition. It is actively debated whether the storage limitations of working memory reflect a small number of storage units (slots) or a decrease in coding resolution as a limited resource is allocated to more items. In a cortical model, we found that slot-like capacity and resource-like neural coding resulted from the same mechanism, offering an integrated explanation for storage limitations.
在过去十年中,关于工作记忆存储限制的研究一直由两种根本不同的假设主导。一方面,工作记忆的内容可能存储在数量有限的“插槽”中,每个插槽具有固定的分辨率。另一方面,可以存储任意数量的项目,但分辨率会降低。这两种假设在描述工作记忆的计算结构方面具有重要价值,但都没有完整地解释现有的实验数据,也没有涉及到其所描述的限制的神经基础。为了解决这些不足,我们用一个皮层网络模型模拟了一个多项目工作记忆任务,该模型的细胞分辨率使我们能够根据记忆负荷来量化记忆的编码保真度,通过模拟神经放电的可辨别性、规律性和可靠性来衡量。我们的模拟解释了来自人类和非人类灵长类动物研究的大量神经和行为数据,并且表明反馈抑制会降低容量和编码保真度。由于抑制强度与网络存储的项目数量成比例,增加项目数量会逐渐降低保真度,直到达到容量极限。至关重要的是,该模型对多项目工作记忆任务中的神经活动做出了具体的、可测试的预测。新内容与值得注意之处工作记忆是一种将信息记在心中的能力,是认知的基础。关于工作记忆的存储限制是反映少量存储单元(插槽),还是随着有限资源分配给更多项目而导致编码分辨率下降,目前仍存在激烈争论。在一个皮层模型中,我们发现类似插槽的容量和类似资源的神经编码是由相同机制产生的,为存储限制提供了一个综合解释。