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1.
Neuroscience ; 139(1): 311-6, 2006 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16417974

ABSTRACT

Memory for order information has been tied to the frontal lobes, however, parietal activation is observed in many functional neuroimaging studies. Here we report functional magnetic resonance findings from an event-related experiment involving working memory for order. Five letters were presented for storage, followed after a delay by two probe items. Probe items could be separated by zero to three positions in the memory set and subjects had to indicate whether the items were in the correct order. Analyses indicate that activation in left parietal cortex shows a systematic decrease in activation with increasing probe distance. This finding is consistent with an earlier study in which we suggested that parietal cortical regions mediate the representation of order information via magnitude codes.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials/physiology , Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Time Perception/physiology , Adult , Brain Mapping , Female , Functional Laterality/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Nerve Net/anatomy & histology , Nerve Net/physiology , Neural Pathways/anatomy & histology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neuropsychological Tests , Photic Stimulation , Time Factors
2.
Neuroscience ; 139(1): 195-200, 2006 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16359810

ABSTRACT

Working memory for order information is mediated by different cognitive mechanisms that rely on different neural circuits. Here we discuss evidence that order memory involves mechanisms that range from general supervisory processes to process that maintenance fine-grained temporal position information. We suggest that neural regions-including the prefrontal cortex, motor cortex, parietal cortex and medial temporal structures-operate at different levels and processing stages to give rise to working memory for order information.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/anatomy & histology , Hippocampus/anatomy & histology , Hippocampus/physiology , Humans , Neural Pathways/anatomy & histology , Parietal Lobe/anatomy & histology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/anatomy & histology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Time Factors
3.
Dialogues Clin Neurosci ; 3(3): 151-65, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22034448

ABSTRACT

There are substantial declines in behavioral measures of cognitive function with age, including decreased function of executive processes and long-term memory. There is also evidence that, with age, there is a decrease in brain volume, particularly in the frontal cortex. When young and older adults perform cognitive tasks that depend heavily on frontal function, neuroimaging evidence indicates that older adults recruit additional brain regions in order to perform the tasks. This additional neural recruitment is termed "dedifferentiation," and can take multiple forms. This recruitment of additional neural tissue with age to perform cognitive tasks was not reflected in the behavioral literature, and suggests that there is more plasticity in the ability to organize brain function than was previously suspected. We review both behavioral and neuroscience perspectives on cognitive aging, and then connect the findings in the two areas. From this integration, we suggest important unresolved questions and directions for future research.

4.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 12(1): 174-87, 2000 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10769314

ABSTRACT

Age-related decline in working memory figures prominently in theories of cognitive aging. However, the effects of aging on the neural substrate of working memory are largely unknown. Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to investigate verbal and spatial short-term storage (3 sec) in older and younger adults. Previous investigations with younger subjects performing these same tasks have revealed asymmetries in the lateral organization of verbal and spatial working memory. Using volume of interest (VOI) analyses that specifically compared activation at sites identified with working memory to their homologous twin in the opposite hemisphere, we show pronounced age differences in this organization, particularly in the frontal lobes: In younger adults, activation is predominantly left lateralized for verbal working memory, and right lateralized for spatial working memory, whereas older adults show a global pattern of anterior bilateral activation for both types of memory. Analyses of frontal subregions indicate that several underlying patterns contribute to global bilaterality in older adults: most notably, bilateral activation in areas associated with rehearsal, and paradoxical laterality in dorsolateral prefrontal sites (DLPFC; greater left activation for spatial and greater right activation for verbal). We consider several mechanisms that could account for these age differences including the possibility that bilateral activation reflects recruitment to compensate for neural decline.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Frontal Lobe/physiology , Functional Laterality/physiology , Memory/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Verbal Learning/physiology , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Photic Stimulation , Tomography, Emission-Computed
5.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 12(1): 188-96, 2000 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10769315

ABSTRACT

Older adults were tested on a verbal working memory task that used the item-recognition paradigm. On some trials of this task, response-conflict was created by presenting test-items that were familiar but were not members of a current set of items stored in memory. These items required a negative response, but their familiarity biased subjects toward a positive response. Younger subjects show an interference effect on such trials, and this interference is accompanied by activation of a region of left lateral prefrontal cortex. However, there has been no evidence that the activation in this region is causally related to the interference that the subjects exhibit. In the present study, we demonstrate that older adults show more behavioral interference than younger subjects on this task, and they also show no reliable activation at the same lateral prefrontal site. This leads to the conclusion that this prefrontal site is functionally involved in mediating resolution among conflicting responses or among conflicting representations in working memory.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Memory/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Tomography, Emission-Computed , Verbal Learning/physiology , Aged , Choice Behavior/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Humans , Middle Aged
6.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 12 Suppl 2: 130-44, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11506653

ABSTRACT

Working memory is thought to include a mechanism that allows for the coding of order information. One question of interest is how order information is coded, and how that code is neurally implemented. Here we report both behavioral and fMRI findings from an experiment involved comparing two tasks, an item-memory task and an order-memory task. In each case, five letters were presented for storage, followed after a brief interval by a set of probe letters. In the case of the item-memory task, the two letters were identical, and the subject responded to the question, "Was this letter one of the items you saw?". In the case of the order-memory task, the letters were different, and subjects responded to the question, "Are these two letters in the order in which you saw them?". Behaviorally, items that were further apart in the sequence that elicited faster reaction times and higher accuracy in the Order task. Areas that were significantly more activated in the Order condition included the parietal and prefrontal cortex. Parietal activations overlapped those involved in number processing, leading to the suggestion that the underlying representation of order and numbers may share a common process, coding for magnitude.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping/methods , Cognition/physiology , Memory/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Reaction Time , Time Factors
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 95(14): 8410-3, 1998 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9653200

ABSTRACT

There are many occasions in which humans and other animals must inhibit the production of some behavior or inhibit the processing of some internal representation. Success in inhibitory processing under normal circumstances can be revealed by the fact that certain brain pathologies render inhibitory processing ineffective. These pathologies often have been associated with damage to frontal cortex, including lateral and inferior aspects. We provide behavioral evidence of a verbal working memory task that, by hypothesis, engaged inhibitory processing, and we show (by using positron emission tomograpny) that the inhibitory processing is associated with a lateral portion of the left prefrontal cortex. The task in which subjects engaged was item-recognition: Four target letters were presented for storage followed, after a brief interval, by a probe letter that could match a target letter or not. On some trials, when the probe did not match a target letter and therefore required a "no" response, the probe had matched a target letter of the previous trial, so on these trials a "yes" response was prepotent and had to be inhibited, by hypothesis. Compared with a condition in which no prepotent response was created, this condition yielded brain activation in left inferior frontal gyrus, in the region of Brodmann's area 45.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Memory/physiology , Adult , Humans
8.
J Neurosci ; 18(13): 5026-34, 1998 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9634568

ABSTRACT

Neuroimaging studies of normal subjects and studies of patients with focal lesions implicate regions of parietal cortex in verbal working memory (VWM), yet the precise role of parietal cortex in VWM remains unclear. Some evidence (; ) suggests that the parietal cortex mediates the storage of verbal information, but these studies and most previous ones included encoding and retrieval processes as well as storage and rehearsal of verbal information. A recent positron emission tomography (PET) study by isolated storage and rehearsal from other VWM processes and did not find reliable activation in parietal cortex. This result suggests that parietal cortex may not be involved in VWM storage, contrary to previous proposals. However, we report two behavioral studies indicating that some of the verbal material used by may not have required phonological representations in VWM. In addition, we report a PET study that isolated VWM encoding, retrieval, and storage and rehearsal processes in different PET scans and used material likely to require phonological codes in VWM. After subtraction of appropriate controls, the encoding condition revealed no reliable activations; the retrieval condition revealed reliable activations in dorsolateral prefrontal, anterior cingulate, posterior parietal, and extrastriate cortices, and the storage condition revealed reliable activations in dorsolateral prefrontal, inferior frontal, premotor, and posterior parietal cortices, as well as cerebellum. These results suggest that parietal regions are part of a network of brain areas that mediate the short-term storage and retrieval of phonologically coded verbal material.


Subject(s)
Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Verbal Learning/physiology , Cerebellum/diagnostic imaging , Cerebellum/physiology , Female , Frontal Lobe/diagnostic imaging , Frontal Lobe/physiology , Gyrus Cinguli/diagnostic imaging , Gyrus Cinguli/physiology , Humans , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Motor Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Motor Cortex/physiology , Parietal Lobe/diagnostic imaging , Speech/physiology , Tomography, Emission-Computed
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 95(3): 876-82, 1998 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9448254

ABSTRACT

We review research on the neural bases of verbal working memory, focusing on human neuroimaging studies. We first consider experiments that indicate that verbal working memory is composed of multiple components. One component involves the subvocal rehearsal of phonological information and is neurally implemented by left-hemisphere speech areas, including Broca's area, the premotor area, and the supplementary motor area. Other components of verbal working memory may be devoted to pure storage and to executive processing of the contents of memory. These studies rest on a subtraction logic, in which two tasks are imaged, differing only in that one task presumably has an extra process, and the difference image is taken to reflect that process. We then review studies that show that the previous results can be obtained with experimental methods other than subtraction. We focus on the method of parametric variation, in which a parameter that presumably reflects a single process is varied. In the last section, we consider the distinction between working memory tasks that require only storage of information vs. those that require that the stored items be processed in some way. These experiments provide some support for the hypothesis that, when a task requires processing the contents of working memory, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is disproportionately activated.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Brain/anatomy & histology , Brain/physiology , Memory/physiology , Verbal Learning/physiology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Subtraction Technique , Tomography, Emission-Computed
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