09:00 - 10:30
Parallel sessions 7
09:00 - 10:30
Room: HSZ - N9
Chair/s:
Thomas B Christophel, Rosanne Rademaker
We are capable of retaining a large variety of visual content in working memory, ranging from simple low-level features to complex naturalistic stimuli. Maintenance of visual information in working memory is accompanied by memory-specific activity across the entire cortical sheet from early visual areas to frontal cortex. Interference between memory content and distractors shapes these representations, as does the passage of time. Here, we bring together experts from cognitive psychology and neuroscience trying to understand the cortical and cognitive mechanisms of short-term memory. Using behavioral work, TMS, single-cell recordings, fMRI, and convolutional neural networks, they assess the representational nature of working memory storage and its interaction with the environment.  
First, Pablo Grassi asks whether activity in sensory cortex is necessary for the maintenance of visual information. He will present results from three experiments investigating whether TMS pulses applied over visual cortex interfere with working memory performance for low-level features. Michael Wolff will then show that V1 neurons reverse preference between the processing and short-term maintenance of natural images, evident in both spontaneous and evoked (“pinged”) spiking activity. This suggests that neural adaptation acts like a short-term memory buffer in the early sensory cortex. Next, Anna Zier asks which brain regions represent how low-level visual features (like color and motion) are bound into a more complex object in working memory. Using fMRI decoding, she demonstrates that trial-specific binding information can be identified from memory-related activity in early visual cortex (V1–V4). Then, Anastasia Kiyonaga uses CNN derived similarity measures in natural images to show that low-level and high-level interference uniquely affect working memory performance. Intriguingly, interference effects during working memory are inversely related to long term memory recollection, suggesting competition with immediate memory can strengthen longer-term memory. Finally, Joana Seabra shows that during visual working memory several cortical regions utilize categorical, semantic, and spatial representational formats to maintain simple low-level stimuli in a robust fashion.
Submission 679
What Is the Causal Role of Visual Cortex in Visual Working Memory?
SymposiumTalk-01
Presented by: Pablo Grassi
Pablo Grassi
University of Tübingen, Psychology, Germany
Max Plack Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Cognitive Neuroscience and Neurotechnology Group, Germany
Maintenance of visual information in visual working memory (VWM) has been consistently shown to involve memory-specific activity in early visual areas. However, it remains unclear whether this memory-specific activity is in fact relevant for, or reflective of, the storage of visual information per se, or whether it rather reflects feedback-mediated activity from higher-level areas that are responsible for the actual storage of visual information. Accordingly, previous TMS experiments report inconsistent effects of visual cortex stimulation: some report enhancement, others disruption and some no effect on working memory function. Here, we review previous findings and present three novel TMS experiments specifically designed to investigate the causal role of early visual cortex in working memory. Our results revealed retinotopically specific disruption of VWM performance long into the retention time of a visual working memory task, but not during a visual categorization task. However, while we observed an effect on the effectiveness of VWM performance, we did not observe an effect on the fidelity of the working memory representations. We tentatively conclude that this provides causal evidence that early visual areas are involved in VWM in a retinotopic and task-specific manner, but are not central to the storage of working memory items.