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Competition and Control during Working Memory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 October 2020

Anastasia Kiyonaga
Affiliation:
University of California, San Diego
Mark D'Esposito
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley

Summary

Working memory and perceptual attention are related functions, engaging many similar mechanisms and brain regions. As a consequence, behavioral and neural measures often reveal competition between working memory and attention demands. Yet there remains widespread debate about how working memory operates, and whether it truly shares processes and representations with attention. This Element will examine local-level representational properties to illuminate the storage format of working memory content, as well as systems-level and brain network communication properties to illuminate the attentional processes that control working memory. The Element will integrate both cognitive and neuroscientific accounts, describing shared substrates for working memory and perceptual attention, in a multi-level network architecture that provides robustness to disruptions and allows flexible attentional control in line with goals.
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Competition and Control during Working Memory
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