Notger G. Muller

The functional neuroanatomy of working memory: contributions from human brain lesion studies

Authors:

  • Notger G. Muller

  • Robert T. Knight

Date: 2006

PubMed: 16352402

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Abstract:

Studies of patients with focal brain lesions remain critical components of research programs attempting to understand human brain function. Whereas functional imaging typically reveals activity in distributed brain regions that are involved in a task, lesion studies can define which of these brain regions are necessary for a cognitive process. Further, lesion studies are less critical regarding the selection of baseline conditions needed in functional brain imaging research. Lesion studies suggest a functional subdivision of the visuospatial sketchpad of working memory with a ventral stream reaching from occipital to temporal cortex supporting object recognition and a dorsal stream connecting the occipital with parietal cortex enabling spatial operations. The phonological loop can be divided into a phonological short-term store in inferior parietal cortex and an articulatory subvocal rehearsal process relying on brain areas necessary for speech production, i.e. Broca's area, the supplementary motor association area and possibly the cerebellum. More uncertainty exists regarding the role of the prefrontal cortex in working memory. Whereas single cell studies in non-human primates and functional imaging studies in humans have suggested an extension of the ventral and dorsal path into different subregions of the prefrontal cortex, lesion studies together with recent single-cell and imaging studies point to a non-mnemonic role of the prefrontal cortex, including attentional control of sensory processing, integration of information from different domains, stimulus selection and monitoring of information held in memory. Our own data argue against a modulatory view of the prefrontal cortex and suggest that processes supporting working memory are distributed along ventral and dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex.

Age-related changes in fronto-parietal networks during spatial memory: an ERP study

Authors:

  • Notger G. Muller

  • Robert T. Knight

Date: 2002

PubMed: 11958965

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Abstract:

Spatial attention and memory were compared in young and old subjects using non-delayed and delayed matching-to-sample tests. Both young and older subjects revealed a right hemisphere superiority for spatial processing. Older subjects were as accurate as young controls in the non-delay task supporting preserved attention ability in this spatial task. However, older subjects were impaired at 3 s retention intervals supporting an encoding and/or retrieval deficit in spatial memory. Stimulus evaluation demands were highest in the non-delay task and younger subjects generated the largest posterior P3 in this condition plus an additional frontal P3. The frontal P3 was reduced in amplitude in the delay tasks in the young subjects. Retention of spatial information during the delay period was characterized by a negative slow wave maximal over Pz that predicted later memory performance and was enhanced in those subjects with high memory performance. Conversely, older subjects generated a frontal P3 in both delay and non-delay conditions and a reduced sustained posterior scalp negativity in some delay conditions. The results support age-related alterations in frontal-parietal networks during spatial memory.

Contribution of subregions of the prefrontal cortex to working memory: Evidence from brain lesions in humans

Authors:

  • Notger G. Muller

  • Liana Machado

  • Robert T. Knight

Date: 2002

PubMed: 12167253

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Abstract:

We investigated working memory in patients with focal brain damage involving subregions of the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Lesions in the dorsal portion of lateral PFC or the ventromedial portion of orbital PFC did not impair performance in tasks that required maintenance and monitoring of object or spatial information. Larger lesions involving both ventral and dorsal parts of the lateral PFC impaired maintenance and monitoring of spatial and object information, with more severe deficits observed in the spatial tasks. The results support a distributed localization of function in lateral PFC during working memory.