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Working memory impairment in people with Williams syndrome: Effects of delay, task and stimuli
Authors:Kirsten O&#x;Hearn  Susan Courtney  Whitney Street  Barbara Landau
Institution:aDepartment of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Laboratory of Neurocognitive Development, 112 Loeffler Building, 121 Meyran Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA;bDepartment of Brain and Psychological Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 227 Ames Hall, 3400 N. Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21218, USA;cDepartment of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University, 237 Krieger Hall, 3400 N. Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Abstract:Williams syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with impaired visuospatial representations subserved by the dorsal stream and relatively strong object recognition abilities subserved by the ventral stream. There is conflicting evidence on whether this uneven pattern in WS extends to working memory (WM). The present studies provide a new perspective, testing WM for a single stimulus using a delayed recognition paradigm in individuals with WS and typically developing children matched for mental age (MA matches). In three experiments, participants judged whether a second stimulus ‘matched’ an initial sample, either in location or identity. We first examined memory for faces, houses and locations using a 5 s delay (Experiment 1) and a 2 s delay (Experiment 2). We then tested memory for human faces, houses, cat faces, and shoes with a 2 s delay using a new set of stimuli that were better controlled for expression, hairline and orientation (Experiment 3). With the 5 s delay (Experiment 1), the WS group was impaired overall compared to MA matches. While participants with WS tended to perform more poorly than MA matches with the 2 s delay, they also exhibited an uneven profile compared to MA matches. Face recognition was relatively preserved in WS with friendly faces (Experiment 2) but not when the faces had a neutral expression and were less natural looking (Experiment 3). Experiment 3 indicated that memory for object identity was relatively stronger than memory for location in WS. These findings reveal an overall WM impairment in WS that can be overcome under some conditions. Abnormalities in the parietal lobe/dorsal stream in WS may damage not only the representation of spatial location but may also impact WM for visual stimuli more generally.
Keywords:Williams syndrome  Working memory  Dorsal stream  Parietal lobe  Development  Developmental disorder  Spatial representation  Visuospatial  Frontoparietal
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