Department of Psychology & Milan Center for Neuroscience - NeuroMI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy; Ph.D. program in Neuroscience, School of Medicine and Surgery, University of Milano-Bicocca, Monza, Italy.
Department of Psychology & Milan Center for Neuroscience - NeuroMI, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.
Cortex. 2019 Oct;119:89-99. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2019.04.009. Epub 2019 Apr 20.
A wide range of human activities are performed sequentially in few seconds. We need to maintain a correct temporal order of words in language, movements in actions, directions in navigation, etc. Therefore, it is plausible, in a more economical perspective, that our brain is equipped with a dedicated mechanism for storing a temporal sequence for a short time. To investigate it, we run four TMS experiments, in which participants performed different short-term memory tasks, i.e., three (verbal, spatial, motor) requiring maintenance of an ordered sequence and one (visual) of a static pattern. We demonstrated, for the first time, that the left supramarginal gyrus is one of the key nodes of the STM network involved in retaining an abstract representation of serial order information, independently from the content information, namely the nature of the item to be remembered, which instead is stored separately.
人类的各种活动在短短几秒钟内就可以连续完成。我们需要在语言中保持词语的正确时间顺序、动作中的运动顺序、导航中的方向等。因此,从更经济的角度来看,我们的大脑配备了一个专门的机制,用于短时间存储时间序列,这是合理的。为了研究这一点,我们进行了四项 TMS 实验,参与者在这些实验中执行不同的短期记忆任务,即三个(言语、空间、运动)需要维持有序序列,一个(视觉)是静态模式。我们首次证明,左缘上回是参与保留序列信息抽象表示的 STM 网络的关键节点之一,与内容信息(即要记住的项目的性质)无关,而后者则单独存储。