Litcius/Paper detail

Planning the Potential Future during Multi-item Visual Working Memory

Rose Nasrawi, Freek van Ede

2022Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Working memory allows us to retain visual information to guide upcoming future behavior. In line with this future-oriented purpose of working memory, recent studies have shown that action planning occurs during encoding and retention of a single visual item, for which the upcoming action is certain. We asked whether and how this extends to multi-item visual working memory, when visual representations serve the potential future. Human participants performed a visual working-memory task with a memory-load manipulation (one/two/four items) and a delayed orientation-reproduction report (of one item). We measured EEG to track 15- to 25-Hz beta activity in electrodes contralateral to the required response hand-a canonical marker of action planning. We show an attenuation of beta activity, not only in Load 1 (with one certain future action) but also in Load 2 (with two potential future actions), compared with Load 4 (with low prospective-action certainty). Moreover, in Load 2, potential action planning occurs regardless whether both visual items afford similar or dissimilar manual responses, and it predicts the speed of ensuing memory-guided behavior. This shows that potential action planning occurs during multi-item visual working memory and brings the perspective that working memory helps us prepare for the potential future.

Topics & Concepts

Working memoryPsychologyCognitive psychologyAction (physics)Visual memoryEncoding (memory)Visual short-term memoryTask (project management)NeuroscienceCognitionPhysicsEconomicsQuantum mechanicsManagementNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeural dynamics and brain function