The amount of information that can be stored in working memory is limited but may be improved with practice. The basis of improved efficiency at the level of neural activity is unknown. To investigate this question, we trained monkeys to perform a working memory task that required memory for multiple stimuli. Performance decreased as a function of number of stimuli to be remembered, but improved as the animals practiced the task. Neuronal recordings acquired during this training revealed two hitherto unknown mechanisms of working memory capacity improvement. First, more prefrontal neurons became active as working memory improved, but their baseline activity decreased. Second, improved working memory capacity was characterized by less variable temporal dynamics, resulting in a more consistent firing rate at each time point during the course of a trial. Our results reveal that improved performance of working memory tasks is achieved through more distributed activation and invariant neuronal dynamics.
CITATION STYLE
Tang, H., Qi, X. L., Riley, M. R., & Constantinidis, C. (2019). Working memory capacity is enhanced by distributed prefrontal activation and invariant temporal dynamics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(14), 7095–7100. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1817278116
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