Slow Wave Activity Related to Working Memory Maintenance in the N-Back Task

Author:

Bailey Kira1,Mlynarczyk Gregory2,West Robert2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological Science, University of Missouri, USA

2. Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA

Abstract

Abstract. Working memory supports our ability to maintain goal-relevant information that guides cognition in the face of distraction or competing tasks. The N-back task has been widely used in cognitive neuroscience to examine the functional neuroanatomy of working memory. Fewer studies have capitalized on the temporal resolution of event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to examine the time course of neural activity in the N-back task. The primary goal of the current study was to characterize slow wave activity observed in the response-to-stimulus interval in the N-back task that may be related to maintenance of information between trials in the task. In three experiments, we examined the effects of N-back load, interference, and response accuracy on the amplitude of the P3b following stimulus onset and slow wave activity elicited in the response-to-stimulus interval. Consistent with previous research, the amplitude of the P3b decreased as N-back load increased. Slow wave activity over the frontal and posterior regions of the scalp was sensitive to N-back load and was insensitive to interference or response accuracy. Together these findings lead to the suggestion that slow wave activity observed in the response-to-stimulus interval is related to the maintenance of information between trials in the 1-back task.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Physiology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,General Neuroscience

Reference44 articles.

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3. A Parametric Study of Prefrontal Cortex Involvement in Human Working Memory

4. Neural mechanisms of interference control underlie the relationship between fluid intelligence and working memory span.

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