Title of article :
Auditory event-related potentials during a spatial working memory task
Author/Authors :
S.K. Rader، نويسنده , , J.L. Holmes، نويسنده , , E.J. Golob، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Objective
Sensory cortical activity can be jointly governed by bottom–up (e.g. stimulus features) and top–down (e.g. memory, attention) factors. We tested the hypothesis that auditory sensory cortical activity is affected by encoding and retrieval of spatial information.
Methods
Auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded during working memory and passive listening conditions. Trials contained three noise bursts (two “items” at different locations, followed by a “probe”). In the working memory task subjects determined if the probe matched an item location. The influence of long-term memory was evaluated by training to one location that was always a non-match. Auditory ERPs were analyzed to items and probes (N100, P200, late positive wave-LPW).
Results
Reaction times varied significantly among probes (trained non-match < matches < non-match). In only the Passive condition N100 and P200 amplitudes to the first item were significantly larger than the second item. Probe ERP amplitudes (N100, LPW) were comparable for match and trained non-match probes relative to non-matches.
Conclusions
Findings suggest that top–down factors during encoding modify sensory responses to successive items. Probe ERPs reflect sequence factors, such as recency and stimulus probability, and retrieval mechanisms not evident in passive listening.
Significance
Results support a contribution of auditory cortex to working memory.
Keywords :
sound localization , Evoked potentials , EEG , Sensory cortex , Short-term memory
Journal title :
Clinical Neurophysiology
Journal title :
Clinical Neurophysiology