Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States.
Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2023 May 1;129(5):1191-1211. doi: 10.1152/jn.00302.2021. Epub 2023 Mar 29.
Oscillations in the alpha frequency band (∼8-12 Hz) of the human electroencephalogram play an important role in supporting selective attention to visual items and maintaining their spatial locations in working memory (WM). Recent findings suggest that spatial information maintained in alpha is modulated by interruptions to continuous visual input, such that attention shifts, eye closure, and backward masking of the encoded item cause reconstructed representations of remembered locations to become degraded. Here, we investigated how another common visual disruption-eye movements-modulates reconstructions of behaviorally relevant and irrelevant item locations held in WM. Participants completed a delayed estimation task, where they encoded and recalled either the location or color of an object after a brief retention period. During retention, participants either fixated at the center or executed a sequence of eye movements. Electroencephalography (EEG) was recorded at the scalp and eye position was monitored with an eye tracker. Inverted encoding modeling (IEM) was applied to reconstruct location-selective responses across multiple frequency bands during encoding and retention. Location-selective responses were successfully reconstructed from alpha activity during retention where participants fixated at the center, but these reconstructions were disrupted during eye movements. Recall performance decreased during eye-movements conditions but remained largely intact, and further analyses revealed that under specific task conditions, it was possible to reconstruct retained location information from lower frequency bands (1-4 Hz) during eye movements. These results suggest that eye movements disrupt maintained spatial information in alpha in a manner consistent with other acute interruptions to continuous visual input, but this information may be represented in other frequency bands. Neural oscillations in the alpha frequency band support selective attention to visual items and maintenance of their spatial locations in human working memory. Here, we investigate how eye movements disrupt representations of item locations held in working memory. Although it was not possible to recover item locations from alpha during eye movements, retained location information could be recovered from select lower frequency bands. This suggests that during eye movements, stored spatial information may be represented in other frequencies.
人类脑电图中的α频段(∼8-12 Hz)波动在支持视觉项目的选择性注意和在工作记忆(WM)中维持其空间位置方面发挥着重要作用。最近的研究结果表明,在α频段中保持的空间信息受到连续视觉输入中断的调制,例如,注意力转移、眼睛闭合和被编码项目的后向掩蔽会导致记忆位置的重建表示变得退化。在这里,我们研究了另一种常见的视觉干扰——眼动——如何调制 WM 中保持的行为相关和不相关项目位置的重建。参与者完成了延迟估计任务,在短暂的保留期后,他们对物体的位置或颜色进行编码和回忆。在保留期间,参与者要么固定在中心,要么执行一系列眼动。记录头皮上的脑电图(EEG),并通过眼动跟踪器监测眼睛位置。在编码和保留期间,应用反转编码建模(IEM)重建多个频带中的位置选择性响应。当参与者固定在中心时,可以从α活动中成功重建保留期间的位置选择性响应,但在眼动期间这些响应会受到干扰。在眼动条件下,回忆表现下降,但基本保持不变,进一步的分析表明,在特定任务条件下,在眼动期间可以从较低的频带(1-4 Hz)重建保留的位置信息。这些结果表明,眼动以与其他连续视觉输入中断一致的方式破坏α中保持的空间信息,但该信息可能在其他频带中表示。α频段中的神经振荡支持人类工作记忆中对视觉项目的选择性注意和对其空间位置的维持。在这里,我们研究眼动如何破坏工作记忆中保持的项目位置的表示。虽然在眼动期间无法从α中恢复项目位置,但保留的位置信息可以从特定的较低频带中恢复。这表明,在眼动期间,存储的空间信息可能以其他频率表示。