Neural Bases of Human Working Memory |
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Authors: | Edward E Smith |
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Institution: | Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan |
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Abstract: | Working memory is the memory system that allows us to briefly keep information active, often so we can operate on it. Studies with rhesus monkeys first established that this system is partly mediated by neural mechanisms in the prefrontal cortex. Recently, there has been a substantial effort to study the neural bases of working memory in humans, using neuroimaging techniques such as positron emission tomography and functional magnetic resonance imaging. Some of the initial neuroimaging studies with humans focused on the neural mechanisms that mediate our ability to keep spatial information active. These results indicated that human spatial working memory is partly mediated by regions in parietal and prefrontal cortex. Subsequent research has shown that a different neural system is involved when people store object (rather than spatial) information, a difference similar to that found in monkeys. |
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Keywords: | working memory spatial working memory neuroimaging prefrontal cortex |
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