Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory

During the comparison stage of visual working memory (VWM) processing, detecting the mismatch between the external sensory input and internal representations is a crucial cognitive ability for human, but the neural mechanism behind it remains largely unclear. The present study investigated the role...

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Main Authors: Tengfei Liang, Zhonghua Hu, Qiang Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01821/full
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spelling doaj-eb071c34530447ffae2f02d0d2117e4f2020-11-24T21:10:51ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782017-10-01810.3389/fpsyg.2017.01821283264Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working MemoryTengfei LiangZhonghua HuQiang LiuDuring the comparison stage of visual working memory (VWM) processing, detecting the mismatch between the external sensory input and internal representations is a crucial cognitive ability for human, but the neural mechanism behind it remains largely unclear. The present study investigated the role of frontal theta power in detecting the mismatched information in VWM in a delayed matching task. A control task required to compare two simultaneously presented visual figures was also designed as a contrast to exclude the possibility that frontal theta activity just reflecting the non-memory-related behavioral conflicts. To better characterize the control mechanisms shaped by the frontal theta oscillation in human VWM, colored shapes were adopted as materials while both the task-relevant shape feature and task-irrelevant color feature could be mismatched. We found that the response times of participants were significantly delayed under the relevant- and irrelevant-mismatch conditions in both tasks and the conjunction-mismatch condition in delayed matching task. While our EEG data showed that increased frontal theta power was only observed under the relevant- and conjunction-mismatch conditions in the delayed matching task, but not the control task. These findings suggest that the frontal distributed theta activity observed here reflects the detection of mismatched information during the comparison stage of VWM, rather than the response-related conflicts. Furthermore, it is consistent with the proposal that theta-band oscillation can act as a control mechanism in working memory function so that the target-mismatched information in VWM could be successfully tracked. We also propose a possible processing structure to explain the neural dynamics underlying the mismatch detection process in VWM.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01821/fullmismatchfrontal theta activityvisual working memorycontrol processingdelayed matching task
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tengfei Liang
Zhonghua Hu
Qiang Liu
spellingShingle Tengfei Liang
Zhonghua Hu
Qiang Liu
Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory
Frontiers in Psychology
mismatch
frontal theta activity
visual working memory
control processing
delayed matching task
author_facet Tengfei Liang
Zhonghua Hu
Qiang Liu
author_sort Tengfei Liang
title Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory
title_short Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory
title_full Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory
title_fullStr Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory
title_full_unstemmed Frontal Theta Activity Supports Detecting Mismatched Information in Visual Working Memory
title_sort frontal theta activity supports detecting mismatched information in visual working memory
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2017-10-01
description During the comparison stage of visual working memory (VWM) processing, detecting the mismatch between the external sensory input and internal representations is a crucial cognitive ability for human, but the neural mechanism behind it remains largely unclear. The present study investigated the role of frontal theta power in detecting the mismatched information in VWM in a delayed matching task. A control task required to compare two simultaneously presented visual figures was also designed as a contrast to exclude the possibility that frontal theta activity just reflecting the non-memory-related behavioral conflicts. To better characterize the control mechanisms shaped by the frontal theta oscillation in human VWM, colored shapes were adopted as materials while both the task-relevant shape feature and task-irrelevant color feature could be mismatched. We found that the response times of participants were significantly delayed under the relevant- and irrelevant-mismatch conditions in both tasks and the conjunction-mismatch condition in delayed matching task. While our EEG data showed that increased frontal theta power was only observed under the relevant- and conjunction-mismatch conditions in the delayed matching task, but not the control task. These findings suggest that the frontal distributed theta activity observed here reflects the detection of mismatched information during the comparison stage of VWM, rather than the response-related conflicts. Furthermore, it is consistent with the proposal that theta-band oscillation can act as a control mechanism in working memory function so that the target-mismatched information in VWM could be successfully tracked. We also propose a possible processing structure to explain the neural dynamics underlying the mismatch detection process in VWM.
topic mismatch
frontal theta activity
visual working memory
control processing
delayed matching task
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01821/full
work_keys_str_mv AT tengfeiliang frontalthetaactivitysupportsdetectingmismatchedinformationinvisualworkingmemory
AT zhonghuahu frontalthetaactivitysupportsdetectingmismatchedinformationinvisualworkingmemory
AT qiangliu frontalthetaactivitysupportsdetectingmismatchedinformationinvisualworkingmemory
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