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A Parieto-Medial Temporal Pathway for the Strategic Control over Working Memory Biases in Human Visual Attention
Author(s)
Date Issued
2012-12-05
Date Available
2015-01-15T15:00:50Z
Abstract
The contents of working memory (WM) can both aid and disrupt the goal-directed allocation of visual attention. WM benefits attention when its contents overlap with goal-relevant stimulus features, but WM leads attention astray when its contents match features of currently irrelevant stimuli. Recent behavioral data have documented that WM biases of attention may be subject to strategic cognitive control processes whereby subjects are able to either enhance or inhibit the influence of WM contents on attention. However, the neural mechanisms supporting cognitive control over WM biases on attention are presently unknown. Here, we characterize these mechanisms by combining human functional magnetic resonance imaging with a task that independently manipulates the relationship between WM cues and attention targets during visual search (with WM contents matching either search targets or distracters), as well as the predictability of this relationship (100 vs 50% predictability) to assess participants' ability to strategically enhance or inhibit WM biases on attention when WM contents reliably matched targets or distracter stimuli, respectively. We show that cues signaling predictable (> unpredictable) WM-attention relations reliably enhanced search performance, and that this strategic modulation of the interplay between WM contents and visual attention was mediated by a neuroanatomical network involving the posterior parietal cortex, the posterior cingulate, and medial temporal lobe structures, with responses in the hippocampus proper correlating with behavioral measures of strategic control of WM biases. Thus, we delineate a novel parieto-medial temporal pathway implementing cognitive control over WM biases to optimize goal-directed selection.
Other Sponsorship
National Institute of Mental Health Award
Medical Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Society for Neroscience
Journal
Journal of Neuroscience
Volume
32
Issue
49
Start Page
17563
End Page
17571
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 the Authors
Subject – LCSH
Working memory
Attention
fMRI
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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4._Soto_Expectation_JN_prepub.pdf
Size
1.19 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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