Practice-related improvement in working memory is modulated by changes in processing external interference.

Abstract:

:Working memory (WM) performance is impaired by the presence of external interference. Accordingly, more efficient processing of intervening stimuli with practice may lead to enhanced WM performance. To explore the role of practice on the impact that interference has on WM performance, we studied young adults with electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings as they performed three motion-direction, delayed-recognition tasks. One task was presented without interference, whereas two tasks introduced different types of interference during the interval of memory maintenance: distractors and interruptors. Distractors were to be ignored, whereas interruptors demanded attention based on task instructions for a perceptual discrimination. We show that WM performance was disrupted by both types of interference, but interference-induced disruption abated across a single experimental session through rapid learning. WM accuracy and response time improved in a manner that was correlated with changes in early neural measures of interference processing in visual cortex (i.e., P1 suppression and N1 enhancement). These results suggest practice-related changes in processing interference exert a positive influence on WM performance, highlighting the importance of filtering irrelevant information and the dynamic interactions that exist between neural processes of perception, attention, and WM during learning.

journal_name

J Neurophysiol

authors

Berry AS,Zanto TP,Rutman AM,Clapp WC,Gazzaley A

doi

10.1152/jn.00179.2009

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2009-09-01 00:00:00

pages

1779-89

issue

3

eissn

0022-3077

issn

1522-1598

pii

00179.2009

journal_volume

102

pub_type

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