Working memory (WM) and visual selection processes inter- act in a reciprocal fashion based on overlapping representations abstracted from the physical characteristics of stimuli. Here, we assessed the neural basis of this interaction using facial expres- sions that conveyed emotion information. Participants memo- rized an emotional word for a later recognition test and then searched for a face of a particular gender presented in a display with two faces that differed in gender and expression. The rela- tion between the emotional word and the expressions of the target and distractor faces was varied. RTs for the memory test were faster when the target face matched the emotional word held in WM (on valid trials) relative to when the emotional word matched the expression of the distractor (on invalid trials). There was also enhanced activation on valid compared with invalid trials in the lateral orbital gyrus, superior frontal polar (BA 10), lateral occipital sulcus, and pulvinar. Re-presentation of the WM stimulus in the search display led to an earlier onset of ac- tivity in the superior and inferior frontal gyri and the anterior hip- pocampus irrespective of the search validity of the re-presented stimulus. The data indicate that the middle temporal and pre- frontal cortices are sensitive to the reappearance of stimuli that are held in WM, whereas a fronto-thalamic occipital network is sensitive to the behavioral significance of the match between WM and targets for selection. We conclude that these networks are modulated by high-level matches between the contents of WM, behavioral goals, and current sensory input.

The interrelations between verbal working memory and visual selection of emotional faces / Grecucci, A.; Soto, D.; Rumiati, R. I.; Humphreys, G. W.; Rotshtein, P.. - In: JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 0898-929X. - 22:6(2010), pp. 1189-1200. [10.1162/jocn.2009.21276]

The interrelations between verbal working memory and visual selection of emotional faces

Rumiati, R. I.;
2010-01-01

Abstract

Working memory (WM) and visual selection processes inter- act in a reciprocal fashion based on overlapping representations abstracted from the physical characteristics of stimuli. Here, we assessed the neural basis of this interaction using facial expres- sions that conveyed emotion information. Participants memo- rized an emotional word for a later recognition test and then searched for a face of a particular gender presented in a display with two faces that differed in gender and expression. The rela- tion between the emotional word and the expressions of the target and distractor faces was varied. RTs for the memory test were faster when the target face matched the emotional word held in WM (on valid trials) relative to when the emotional word matched the expression of the distractor (on invalid trials). There was also enhanced activation on valid compared with invalid trials in the lateral orbital gyrus, superior frontal polar (BA 10), lateral occipital sulcus, and pulvinar. Re-presentation of the WM stimulus in the search display led to an earlier onset of ac- tivity in the superior and inferior frontal gyri and the anterior hip- pocampus irrespective of the search validity of the re-presented stimulus. The data indicate that the middle temporal and pre- frontal cortices are sensitive to the reappearance of stimuli that are held in WM, whereas a fronto-thalamic occipital network is sensitive to the behavioral significance of the match between WM and targets for selection. We conclude that these networks are modulated by high-level matches between the contents of WM, behavioral goals, and current sensory input.
2010
22
6
1189
1200
Grecucci, A.; Soto, D.; Rumiati, R. I.; Humphreys, G. W.; Rotshtein, P.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/16482
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