Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory

The limited capacity of visual working memory (vWM) necessitates the efficient allocation of available resources by prioritizing relevant over irrelevant items. Retro-cues, which inform about the future relevance of items after encoding has already finished, can improve the quality of memory represe...

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Main Authors: Wanja A. Mössing, Niko A. Busch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-06-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9398.pdf
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author Wanja A. Mössing
Niko A. Busch
author_facet Wanja A. Mössing
Niko A. Busch
author_sort Wanja A. Mössing
collection DOAJ
description The limited capacity of visual working memory (vWM) necessitates the efficient allocation of available resources by prioritizing relevant over irrelevant items. Retro-cues, which inform about the future relevance of items after encoding has already finished, can improve the quality of memory representations of the relevant items. A candidate mechanism of this retro-cueing benefit is lateralization of neural oscillations in the alpha-band, but its precise role is still debated. The relative decrease of alpha power contralateral to the relevant items has been interpreted as supporting inhibition of irrelevant distractors or as supporting maintenance of relevant items. Here, we aimed at resolving this debate by testing how the magnitude of alpha-band lateralization affects behavioral performance: does stronger lateralization improve the precision of the relevant memory or does it reduce the biasing influence of the irrelevant distractor? We found that it does neither: while the data showed a clear retro-cue benefit and a biasing influence of non-target items as well as clear cue-induced alpha-band lateralization, the magnitude of this lateralization was not correlated with any performance parameter. This finding may indicate that alpha-band lateralization, which is typically observed in response to mnemonic cues, indicates an automatic shift of attention that only coincides with, but is not directly involved in mnemonic prioritization.
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spelling doaj.art-2d9d601e04cb4efa9a00c9429c5699fb2023-12-03T11:04:18ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-06-018e939810.7717/peerj.9398Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memoryWanja A. Mössing0Niko A. Busch1Institute of Psychology, University of Münster, Münster, GermanyInstitute of Psychology, University of Münster, Münster, GermanyThe limited capacity of visual working memory (vWM) necessitates the efficient allocation of available resources by prioritizing relevant over irrelevant items. Retro-cues, which inform about the future relevance of items after encoding has already finished, can improve the quality of memory representations of the relevant items. A candidate mechanism of this retro-cueing benefit is lateralization of neural oscillations in the alpha-band, but its precise role is still debated. The relative decrease of alpha power contralateral to the relevant items has been interpreted as supporting inhibition of irrelevant distractors or as supporting maintenance of relevant items. Here, we aimed at resolving this debate by testing how the magnitude of alpha-band lateralization affects behavioral performance: does stronger lateralization improve the precision of the relevant memory or does it reduce the biasing influence of the irrelevant distractor? We found that it does neither: while the data showed a clear retro-cue benefit and a biasing influence of non-target items as well as clear cue-induced alpha-band lateralization, the magnitude of this lateralization was not correlated with any performance parameter. This finding may indicate that alpha-band lateralization, which is typically observed in response to mnemonic cues, indicates an automatic shift of attention that only coincides with, but is not directly involved in mnemonic prioritization.https://peerj.com/articles/9398.pdfNeural oscillationsAlpha rhythmAlpha lateralizationVisual attentionVisionWorking memory
spellingShingle Wanja A. Mössing
Niko A. Busch
Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory
PeerJ
Neural oscillations
Alpha rhythm
Alpha lateralization
Visual attention
Vision
Working memory
title Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory
title_full Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory
title_fullStr Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory
title_full_unstemmed Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory
title_short Lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro-cueing benefit in visual working memory
title_sort lateralized alpha oscillations are irrelevant for the behavioral retro cueing benefit in visual working memory
topic Neural oscillations
Alpha rhythm
Alpha lateralization
Visual attention
Vision
Working memory
url https://peerj.com/articles/9398.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT wanjaamossing lateralizedalphaoscillationsareirrelevantforthebehavioralretrocueingbenefitinvisualworkingmemory
AT nikoabusch lateralizedalphaoscillationsareirrelevantforthebehavioralretrocueingbenefitinvisualworkingmemory