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The neural basis of updating: Distinguishing substitution processes from other concurrent processes
Authors:PATRIK SÖRQVIST  BJØRN SÆTREVIK
Institution:1. Laboratory of Applied Psychology, Centre for Built Environment, University of G?vle, G?vle, Sweden;2. Department of Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, and Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway
Abstract:Sörqvist, P. & Sætrevik, B. (2010). The neural basis of updating: Distinguishing substitution processes from other concurrent processes. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 51, 357–362. Most previous studies of updating processes have not been able to contrast processes of substituting items in memory with other concurrent processes. In the present investigation, we used a new task called “number updating” and an fMRI protocol to contrast the activation of trials that require item substitution (adding a new item to the working memory representation and suppressing an old item) with trials that involve no substitution (discarding the new item). Trials that require item substitution activated the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, the posterior medial frontal cortex and the parietal lobes, areas typically seen activated for working memory tasks in general. Trials that do not require substitution activated the anterior medial frontal cortex. Studies examining executive functions have associated this area with cognitive conflict, and may represent suppression of the substitution processes.
Keywords:Event‐related fMRI  updating  substitution  working memory  frontal‐parietal network
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