DeDe宝 (2025-03-26 11:33):
#paper doi: 10.1101/2024.05.11.593696 bioRxiv, 2025,Prioritizing working memory resources depends on prefrontal cortex工作记忆指的是我们在短时间内存储并处理信息的能力,对记忆的处理包括根据优先级分配工作记忆资源。此前研究指出前额叶皮层与工作记忆存储相关,但是否与记忆处理相关尚不明确。该研究中通过经颅磁刺激(TMS)技术研究了sPCS在工作记忆资源分配中的作用。实验发现,TMS干扰sPCS会破坏工作记忆资源的优先级分配,使得对低优先级项目的记忆表现意外地提高。具体来说,当sPCS的特征选择性活动受到干扰时,原本应该分配更多资源给高优先级项目的机制被破坏,导致资源分配更加均衡,从而提高了低优先级项目的记忆表现。这种现象支持了dlPFC(特别是sPCS)在工作记忆资源分配中的控制功能,而不是单纯的存储功能。
Prioritizing working memory resources depends on prefrontal cortex
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Abstract:
ABSTRACTHow the prefrontal cortex contributes to working memory remains controversial, as theories differ in their emphasis on its role in storing memories versus controlling their content. To adjudicate between these competing ideas, we tested how perturbations to the human (both sexes) lateral prefrontal cortex impact the storage and control aspects of working memory during a task that requires human subjects to allocate resources to memory items based on their behavioral priority. Our computational model made a strong prediction that disruption of this control process would counterintuitively improve memory for low-priority items. Remarkably, transcranial magnetic stimulation of retinotopically-defined superior precentral sulcus, but not intraparietal sulcus, unbalanced the prioritization of resources, improving memory for low-priority items as predicted by the model. Therefore, these results provide direct causal support for models in which the prefrontal cortex controls the allocation of resources that support working memory, rather than simply storing the features of memoranda.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTAlthough higher-order cognition depends on working memory, the resources that support our memory are severely limited in capacity. To mitigate this limitation, we allocate memory resources according to the behavioral relevance of items. Nonetheless, the neural basis of these abilities remain unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that a region in lateral prefrontal cortex controls prioritization in working memory. Indeed, perturbing this region with transcranial magnetic stimulation disrupted the prioritization of working memory resources. Our results provide causal evidence for the hypothesis that prefrontal cortex primarily controls the allocation of memory resources, rather than storing the contents of working memory.
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