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Alpha oscillations protect working memory against distracters in a modality-specific way

Ying Zhou, Aarti Ramchandran, Saskia Haegens

2023NeuroImage26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Alpha oscillations are thought to be involved in suppressing distracting input in working-memory tasks. Yet, the spatial-temporal dynamics of such suppression remain unclear. Key questions are whether such suppression reflects a domain-general inattentiveness mechanism, or occurs in a stimulus- or modality-specific manner within cortical areas most responsive to the distracters; and whether the suppression is proactive (i.e., preparatory) or reactive. Here, we addressed these questions using a working-memory task where participants had to memorize an array of visually presented digits and reproduce one of them upon being probed. We manipulated the presence of distracters and the sensory modality in which distracters were presented during memory maintenance. Our results show that sensory areas most responsive to visual and auditory distracters exhibited stronger alpha power increase after visual and auditory distracter presentation respectively. These results suggest that alpha oscillations underlie distracter suppression in a reactive, modality-specific manner.

Topics & Concepts

Stimulus modalityPsychologyWorking memoryMemorizationEchoic memoryModality (human–computer interaction)Cognitive psychologyStimulus (psychology)Sensory systemNeuroscienceCognitionComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceNeural dynamics and brain functionEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
Alpha oscillations protect working memory against distracters in a modality-specific way | Litcius