OBJECTIVE During verbal communication, humans briefly maintain mental representations of speech sounds conveying verbal information, and constantly scan these representations for comparison to incoming information. We determined the spatio-temporal dynamics of such short-term maintenance and subsequent scanning of verbal information, by intracranially measuring high-gamma activity at 70-110Hz during a working memory task. METHODS Patients listened to a stimulus set of two or four spoken letters and were instructed to remember those letters over a two-second interval, following which they were asked to determine if a subsequent target letter had been presented earlier in that trial's stimulus set. RESULTS Auditory presentation of letter stimuli sequentially elicited high-gamma augmentation bilaterally in the superior-temporal and pre-central gyri. During the two-second maintenance period, high-gamma activity was augmented in the left pre-central gyrus, and this effect was larger during the maintenance of stimulus sets consisting of four compared to two letters. During the scanning period following target presentation, high-gamma augmentation involved the left inferior-frontal and supra-marginal gyri. CONCLUSIONS Short-term maintenance of verbal information is, at least in part, supported by the left pre-central gyrus, whereas scanning by the left inferior-frontal and supra-marginal gyri. SIGNIFICANCE The cortical structures involved in short-term maintenance and scanning of speech stimuli were segregated with an excellent temporal resolution.
Spatio-temporal dynamics of working memory maintenance and scanning of verbal information.
T. Kambara,Erik C Brown,Jeong-Won Jeong,N. Ofen,E. Asano
Published 2017 in Clinical Neurophysiology
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2017
- Venue
Clinical Neurophysiology
- Publication date
2017-06-01
- Fields of study
Medicine, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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