4.7 Article

Exploring Information Flow from Posteromedial Cortex during Visuospatial Working Memory: A Magnetoencephalography Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 30, Pages 5944-5955

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2129-21.2022

Keywords

episodic memory; information flow analysis; MEG; posterior cingulate cortex; visuospatial memory

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This study used MEG to measure the activity of the posteromedial cortex (PMC) in healthy human participants during a visuospatial working memory task. The findings suggest that the PMC plays a role in shaping object representations in other cortical regions and influences the retrieval process.
The posteromedial cortex (PMC) is a major hub of the brain???s default mode network, and is implicated in a broad range of internally driven cognitions, including visuospatial working memory. However, its precise contribution to these cognitive processes remains unclear. Using MEG, we measured PMC activity in healthy human participants (young adults of both sexes) while they performed a visuospatial working memory task. Multivariate pattern classification analyses revealed stimulus-related information during encoding and retrieval in a set of a priori defined cortical ROIs, including prefrontal, occipital, and ventrotemporal cortices, in addition to PMC. We measured the extent to which this stimulus information was exchanged between areas in an information flow analysis, measuring Granger-causal relationships between areas over time. Consistent with the visual nature of the task, information from occipital cortex shaped other regions across most epochs. However, the PMC shaped object representations in occipital and prefrontal cortices during visuospatial working memory, influencing occipital cortex during retrieval and PFC across all task epochs. Our findings are consistent with a proposed role for the PMC in the representation of internal content, including remembered information, and in the comparison of external stimuli with remembered material.

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