McEvoy L K, Smith M E, Gevins A
EEG Systems Laboratory, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA.
Cereb Cortex. 1998 Oct-Nov;8(7):563-74. doi: 10.1093/cercor/8.7.563.
Working memory (WM), the ability to briefly retain and manipulate information in mind, is central to intelligent behavior. Here we take advantage of the high temporal resolution of electrophysiological measures to obtain a millisecond timescale view of the activity induced in distributed cortical networks by tasks that impose significant WM demands. We examined how these networks are affected by the type and amount of information to be remembered, and by the amount of task practice. Evoked potentials (EPs) were obtained from eight subjects performing spatial and verbal versions of a visual n-back WM task (n = 1, 2, 3) on each of three testing days. In well-trained subjects, WM tasks elicited transient responses reflecting different subcomponents of task processing, including transient (lasting 0.02-0.3 s) task-sensitive and load-sensitive EPs, as well as sustained responses (lasting 1-1.5 s), including the prestimulus Contingent Negative Variation (CNV), and post-stimulus frontal and parietal Slow Waves. The transient responses, with the exception of the P300, differed between the verbal and spatial task versions, and between trials with different response requirements. The P300 and the Slow Waves were not affected by task version but were affected by increased WM load. These results suggest that WM emerges from the formation of a dynamic cortical network linking task-specific processes with non-specific, capacity-limited, higher-order attentional processes. Practice effects on the EPs suggested that practice led to the development of a more effective cognitive strategy for dealing with lower-order aspects of task processing, but did not diminish demands made on higher order processes. Thus a simple WM task is shown to be composed of numerous elementary subsecond neural processes whose characteristics vary with type and amount of information being remembered, and amount of practice.
工作记忆(WM),即短暂保留和处理脑海中信息的能力,是智能行为的核心。在此,我们利用电生理测量的高时间分辨率,来获取在施加显著工作记忆需求的任务所诱发的分布式皮层网络活动的毫秒级时间尺度视图。我们研究了这些网络如何受到要记忆的信息类型和数量以及任务练习量的影响。在三个测试日的每一天,从八名执行视觉n-回溯工作记忆任务(n = 1、2、3)的空间和语言版本的受试者身上获取诱发电位(EP)。在训练有素的受试者中,工作记忆任务引发了反映任务处理不同子成分的瞬态反应,包括瞬态(持续0.02 - 0.3秒)任务敏感和负荷敏感的诱发电位,以及持续反应(持续1 - 1.5秒),包括刺激前的关联性负变(CNV)以及刺激后的额叶和顶叶慢波。除P300外,瞬态反应在语言和空间任务版本之间以及具有不同反应要求的试验之间存在差异。P300和慢波不受任务版本影响,但受工作记忆负荷增加的影响。这些结果表明,工作记忆源自将特定任务过程与非特定、容量有限的高阶注意力过程相联系的动态皮层网络的形成。对诱发电位的练习效应表明,练习导致了一种更有效的认知策略的发展,用于处理任务处理的低阶方面,但并未减少对高阶过程的需求。因此,一个简单的工作记忆任务被证明是由众多基本的亚秒级神经过程组成,其特征随所记忆信息的类型和数量以及练习量而变化。