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The European Journal of Neuroscience

Publication date: 2002-01-01
Volume: 15 Pages: 165 - 75
Publisher: Wiley

Author:

Cornette, L
Dupont, Patrick ; Orban, Guy

Keywords:

Adolescent, Adult, Attention, Brain, Discrimination (Psychology), Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Short-Term, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Space Perception, Visual Perception, Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Neurosciences, Neurosciences & Neurology, distractor, functional imaging, human, orientation, short-term memory, visual system, WORKING-MEMORY, PREFRONTAL CORTEX, FUNCTIONAL-ORGANIZATION, TEMPORAL CORTEX, SPATIAL MEMORY, NEURONS, DISCRIMINATION, PERFORMANCE, ATTENTION, LESIONS, Discrimination, Psychological, 1109 Neurosciences, 1701 Psychology, 1702 Cognitive Sciences, Neurology & Neurosurgery, 3209 Neurosciences, 5202 Biological psychology, 5204 Cognitive and computational psychology

Abstract:

We used Positron Emission Tomography to map the neural substrate of human short-term memory for orientation, defined as retaining a single orientation in memory over a long delay, by comparing a successive discrimination task with a 6-s delay to the same task with a brief 0.3 s delay and to an identification control task. Short-term memory engaged the superior parietal lobe bilaterally, the middle occipital gyrus bilaterally and the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. In addition, we studied the resistance to a distractor item by comparing the successive discrimination task with long delay, with and without an intervening distractor stimulus. This manipulative process engaged left ventral premotor cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. The activation of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is interpreted as reflecting co-ordination between task components. These results, combined with those of two previous studies using an identical reduction strategy, underscore the functional heterogeneity in the prefrontal cortex during short-term and working memory.