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Journal ArticleDOI

Neural activity predicts individual differences in visual working memory capacity

Edward K. Vogel, +1 more
- 15 Apr 2004 - 
- Vol. 428, Iss: 6984, pp 748-751
TLDR
This work provides electrophysiological evidence for lateralized activity in humans that reflects the encoding and maintenance of items in visual memory and provides a strong neurophysiological predictor of an individual's capacity, allowing a direct relationship between neural activity and memory capacity.
Abstract
Contrary to our rich phenomenological visual experience, our visual short-term memory system can maintain representations of only three to four objects at any given moment. For over a century, the capacity of visual memory has been shown to vary substantially across individuals, ranging from 1.5 to about 5 objects. Although numerous studies have recently begun to characterize the neural substrates of visual memory processes, a neurophysiological index of storage capacity limitations has not yet been established. Here, we provide electrophysiological evidence for lateralized activity in humans that reflects the encoding and maintenance of items in visual memory. The amplitude of this activity is strongly modulated by the number of objects being held in the memory at the time, but approaches a limit asymptotically for arrays that meet or exceed storage capacity. Indeed, the precise limit is determined by each individual's memory capacity, such that the activity from low-capacity individuals reaches this plateau much sooner than that from high-capacity individuals. Consequently, this measure provides a strong neurophysiological predictor of an individual's capacity, allowing the demonstration of a direct relationship between neural activity and memory capacity.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental and Theoretical Approaches to Conscious Processing

TL;DR: Converging neuroimaging and neurophysiological data point to objective neural measures of conscious access: late amplification of relevant sensory activity, long-distance cortico-cortical synchronization at beta and gamma frequencies, and "ignition" of a large-scale prefronto-parietal network.
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Training and plasticity of working memory

TL;DR: The observed training effects suggest that WM training could be used as a remediating intervention for individuals for whom low WM capacity is a limiting factor for academic performance or in everyday life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Discrete fixed-resolution representations in visual working memory

TL;DR: It is shown that, when presented with more than a few simple objects, human observers store a high-resolution representation of a subset of the objects and retain no information about the others.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural measures reveal individual differences in controlling access to working memory.

TL;DR: A neurophysiological measure is reported that gauges an individual's efficiency at excluding irrelevant items from being stored in memory and provides evidence that under many circumstances low capacity individuals may actually store more information in memory than high capacity individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decoding reveals the contents of visual working memory in early visual areas

TL;DR: It is shown that orientations held in working memory can be decoded from activity patterns in the human visual cortex, even when overall levels of activity are low, and early visual areas can retain specific information about visual features held inWorking memory, over periods of many seconds when no physical stimulus is present.
References
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Journal Article

The magical number seven, plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information

TL;DR: The theory of information as discussed by the authors provides a yardstick for calibrating our stimulus materials and for measuring the performance of our subjects and provides a quantitative way of getting at some of these questions.
Book

The magical number seven plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information

TL;DR: The theory provides us with a yardstick for calibrating the authors' stimulus materials and for measuring the performance of their subjects, and the concepts and measures provided by the theory provide a quantitative way of getting at some of these questions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The magical number 4 in short-term memory: a reconsideration of mental storage capacity.

TL;DR: A wide variety of data on capacity limits suggesting that the smaller capacity limit in short-term memory tasks is real is brought together and a capacity limit for the focus of attention is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The capacity of visual working memory for features and conjunctions

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that it is possible to retain information about only four colours or orientations in visual working memory at one time, but it is also possible to retaining both the colour and the orientation of four objects, indicating that visual workingMemory stores integrated objects rather than individual features.
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