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Frontal Midline Theta Reflects Individual Task Performance in a Working Memory Task


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Date

2015-01

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

Frontal midline (fm-)theta activity has been related to working memory (WM) processes, as it typically increases with WM load. The robustness of this effect, however, varies across studies and subjects, putting limits to its interpretation. We hypothesized that variation in the fm-theta effect may reflect individual differences in task difficulty with increasing WM load as indicated by behavioural responses. We further tested whether effects in the alpha range are robust markers of WM load. We recorded 64-channel EEG from 24 healthy adults while they memorized either 2 or 4 unfamiliar symbols (low vs. high WM load) in a modified Sternberg task. The last 2 s of the retention phase were analyzed for WM load-related changes in the theta (5–7 Hz) and alpha range (lower: 8–10 Hz, upper: 10.5–12.5 Hz). Higher WM load led to less accurate and slower responses. The increase of fm-theta with WM load was most pronounced at fm electrodes, localized to anterior cingulate regions, and correlated with the participants’ decrease in accuracy due to higher WM load. Alpha peak frequency increased in the high compared to the low WM load condition, corresponding to a decrease in lower alpha range across all channels. The results demonstrate that previously reported variation in fm-theta workload effects can partly be explained by variation in task difficulty indexed by individual task accuracy. Moreover, the results also demonstrate that alpha WM load effects are prominent when separating upper and lower alpha.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

28 (1)

Pages / Article No.

127 - 134

Publisher

Springer

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Working memory; EEG; Frequency; Theta; Alpha; Individual differences

Organisational unit

Notes

It was possible to publish this article open access thanks to a Swiss National Licence with the publisher.

Funding

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