Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (15)
- Doctoral Thesis (4)
Has Fulltext
- yes (19)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (19)
Keywords
- working memory (19) (remove)
The cell—cell signaling gene CDH13 is associated with a wide spectrum of neuropsychiatric disorders, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism, and major depression. CDH13 regulates axonal outgrowth and synapse formation, substantiating its relevance for neurodevelopmental processes. Several studies support the influence of CDH13 on personality traits, behavior, and executive functions. However, evidence for functional effects of common gene variation in the CDH13 gene in humans is sparse. Therefore, we tested for association of a functional intronic CDH13 SNP rs2199430 with ADHD in a sample of 998 adult patients and 884 healthy controls. The Big Five personality traits were assessed by the NEO-PI-R questionnaire. Assuming that altered neural correlates of working memory and cognitive response inhibition show genotype-dependent alterations, task performance and electroencephalographic event-related potentials were measured by n-back and continuous performance (Go/NoGo) tasks. The rs2199430 genotype was not associated with adult ADHD on the categorical diagnosis level. However, rs2199430 was significantly associated with agreeableness, with minor G allele homozygotes scoring lower than A allele carriers. Whereas task performance was not affected by genotype, a significant heterosis effect limited to the ADHD group was identified for the n-back task. Heterozygotes (AG) exhibited significantly higher N200 amplitudes during both the 1-back and 2-back condition in the central electrode position Cz. Consequently, the common genetic variation of CDH13 is associated with personality traits and impacts neural processing during working memory tasks. Thus, CDH13 might contribute to symptomatic core dysfunctions of social and cognitive impairment in ADHD.
Das visuelle Arbeitsgedächtnis (AG) kann visuelle Information enkodieren, über eine kurze Zeitperiode aktiv halten und mit neu wahrgenommener Information vergleichen. Dadurch ermöglicht es eine Reihe höherer kognitiver Funktionen ( z.B. Kopfrechnen). Störungen des visuellen AGs sind ein relevantes Symptom neurologischer und psychiatrischer Erkrankungen. Die funktionellen und neuronalen Prozesse, die dem visuellen AG unterliegen, stellen eine fundamentale Frage der kognitiven Neurowissenschaft dar. Bisherige Forschung hat bereits einen großen Beitrag zum Verständnis der Vorgänge während der Enkodierungs- und Halte-Phase des AGs geleistet. Die neuronalen Korrelate der Wiedererkennung (WE) hingegen sind relativ unbekannt. Ziel der vorliegenden Studie war es, die neuronalen Mechanismen der WE anhand zweier Modulationen (Gedächtnisbelastung und Ähnlichkeit zwischen Merk- und Test-Stimulus) zu erforschen. Den neuronalen Grundlagen von Ähnlichkeit zwischen wurde bislang nahezu keine Beachtung geschenkt, ihre Untersuchung stellte deshalb eine wesentliche Motivation der Arbeit dar. Da erhöhte Gedächtnislast bei einer endlichen Anzahl an Stimuli zu einer erhöhten Anzahl an möglichen ähnlichen Test-Stimuli und auf diese Weise zu einer erhöhten Ähnlichkeit zwischen Merk- und Test-Stimulus führen kann, sind die Effekte beider Modulationen konfundiert. Es sollte deshalb zusätzlich der Nachweis für einen ähnlichkeitsunabhängigen Lasteffekt erbracht werden. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertation stand der zeitliche Ablauf der zu erwartenden kortikalen Aktivationen im Mittelpunkt des Interesses. Aus diesem Grund kam die Magnetenzephalographie (MEG) mit ihrem hervorragenden zeitlichen und guten räumlichen Auflösungsvermögen zum Einsatz. Die neuronale Aktivität von 17 Probanden wurde mittels MEG erfasst. Zusätzlich wurden Verhaltensdaten (VD) in Form von Reaktionszeit (RZ) und Korrektheit (KH) der Antworten aufgezeichnet. Als Stimuli dienten 15 verschiedene Farben, die einmal den gesamten Farbkreis abbildeten. 1 oder 3 verschiedenfarbige Quadrate dienten als Merk-Stimuli und ein farbiges Quadrat, das einem der vorher gezeigten glich (G), ihm ähnlich (Ä) oder unähnlich (U) war, folgte als Test-Stimulus. Die Probanden antworteten per Fingerheben aus einer Lichtschranke, ob der Test-Stimulus dem Merk-Stimulus glich (G) oder nicht glich (Ä, U). Insgesamt führten die 2 Belastungsmodulationen und die 3 Ähnlichkeitsmodulationen zu einem 2 x 3 Design, das eine Untersuchung der Haupteffekte und Interaktionen von Ähnlichkeit und Last ermöglichte. Die Ergebnisse der VD decken sich mit früheren Erkenntnissen, die mit ansteigender Gedächtnislast und Ähnlichkeit von einer signifikanten Verminderung der KH der Antworten sowie einer signifikanten Zunahme der RZ berichteten. Zusätzlich konnte eine signifikante Interaktion beider Modulationen beobachtet werden. Mit zunehmender Gedächtnislast verlängerte sich die RZ, bzw. verminderte sich die KH der Antworten für gleiche Testreize stärker als für ungleiche (Ä, U). Es konnten wesentliche neue Erkenntnisse über die neuronalen Korrelate der WE im visuellen AG gewonnen werden. Für die Ähnlichkeits-Modulation konnten drei zeitlich, räumlich und funktionell distinkte Ereigniskorrelierte-Felder (EKF)-Komponenten detektiert werden: eine frühe Komponente, die stärker auf U im Vergleich zu Ä und G Stimuli ansprach, eine mittlere, die mit der Schwierigkeit der Aufgabe assoziiert war sowie eine späte Komponente, die als Korrelat einer kategorialen Entscheidung interpretiert wurde. Diese Ergebnisse replizieren Befunde von Studien über die Entscheidungsfindung und die summierte Ähnlichkeit im Langzeitgedächtnis (LZG) und liefern gleichzeitig neue Hinweise für eine funktionelle Dissoziation verschiedener Komponenten der WE im visuellen AG. Die WE scheint aus der Berechnung der summierten Ähnlichkeit, der Entscheidungsfindung sowie der Evidenzevaluation unter schwierigeren Bedingungen zu bestehen. Es gelang außerdem der Nachweis eines ähnlichkeitsunabhängigen Effektes der Lastmodulation. Es konnte eine bilateral parieto-okzipitale sowie eine linksseitig fronto-temporale Aktivierung erfasst werden, die wahrscheinlich allgemeinen Schwierigkeitseffekten entsprechen. Unter ansteigender Gedächtnisbelastung kam es zu einer Zunahme der Amplitude beider Aktivitäten. Diese Ergebnisse bestätigen Befunde über die Amplitudenentwicklung während der Halte-Phase, die als Heranziehung zusätzlicher Ressourcen unter schwierigeren Bedingungen gedeutet wurden. Die EKF-Daten konnten jedoch keine Bestätigung des in den VD nachgewiesenen Interaktionseffektes bringen. Vielversprechende Ansätze für zukünftige Studien bieten eine präzisere Bestimmung der räumlichen Verteilung sowie eine weitere Evaluation der kognitiven Funktion der neuronalen Aktivität der Ähnlichkeit, da die Ähnlichkeit zwischen Merk- und Test-Stimulus eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Beschränkung der WE-Leistung einzunehmen scheint.
This article reports an investigation of how inhibition contributes to fluid reasoning when it is decomposed into the reasoning ability, item-position, and speed components to control for possible method effects. Working memory was also taken into consideration. A sample of 223 university students completed a fluid reasoning scale, two tasks tapping prepotent response inhibition, and two working memory tasks. Fixed-links modeling was used to separate the effect of reasoning ability from the effects of item-position and speed. The goodness-of-fit results confirmed the necessity to consider the reasoning ability, item-position, and speed components simultaneously. Prepotent response inhibition was only associated with reasoning ability. This association disappeared when working memory served as a mediator. Taken together, these results reflect the inhomogeneity of what is tapped by the fluid reasoning scale on one hand and, on the other, suggest inhibition as an important component of working memory.
The role of music in second-language (L2) learning has long been the object of various empirical and theoretical inquiries. However, research on whether the effect of background music (BM) on language-related task performance is facilitative or inhibitory has produced inconsistent findings. Hence, we investigated the effect of happy and sad BM on complexity, accuracy, and fluency (CAF) of L2 speaking among intermediate learners of English. A between-groups design was used, in which 60 participants were randomly assigned to three groups with two experimental groups performing an oral L2 English retelling task while listening to either happy or sad BM, and a control group performing the task with no background music. The results demonstrated the happy BM group’s significant outperformance in fluency over the control group. In accuracy, the happy BM group also outdid the controls (error-free clauses, correct verb forms). Moreover, the sad BM group performed better in accuracy than the controls but in only one of its measures (correct verb forms). Furthermore, no significant difference between the groups in syntactic complexity was observed. The study, in line with the current literature on BM effects, suggests that it might have specific impacts on L2 oral production, explained by factors such as mood, arousal, neural mechanism, and the target task’s properties.
We examined whether positive transfer of cognitive training, which so far has been observed for individual tests only, also generalizes to cognitive abilities, thereby carrying greater promise for improving everyday intellectual competence in adulthood and old age. In the COGITO Study, 101 younger and 103 older adults practiced six tests of perceptual speed (PS), three tests of working memory (WM), and three tests of episodic memory (EM) for over 100 daily 1-h sessions. Transfer assessment included multiple tests of PS, WM, EM, and reasoning. In both age groups, reliable positive transfer was found not only for individual tests but also for cognitive abilities, represented as latent factors. Furthermore, the pattern of correlations between latent change factors of practiced and latent change factors of transfer tasks indicates systematic relations at the level of broad abilities, making the interpretation of effects as resulting from unspecific increases in motivation or self-concept less likely. Keywords: cognitive training, cognitive abilities, transfer, latent factors, working memory
Based on a meta-analysis, Redick and Lindsey (2013) found that complex span and n-back tasks show an average correlation of r = 0.20, and concluded that "complex span and n-back tasks cannot be used interchangeably as working memory measures in research applications" (p. 1102). Here, we comment on this conclusion from a psychometric perspective. In addition to construct variance, performance on a test contains measurement error, task-specific variance, and paradigm-specific variance. Hence, low correlations among dissimilar indicators do not provide strong evidence for the existence, or absence, of a construct common to both indicators. One way to arrive at such evidence is to fit hierarchical latent factors that model task-specific, paradigm-specific, and construct variance. We report analyses for 101 younger and 103 older adults who worked on nine different working memory tasks. The data are consistent with a hierarchical model of working memory, according to which both complex span and n-back tasks are valid indicators of working memory. The working memory factor predicts 71% of the variance in a factor of reasoning among younger adults (83% for among older adults). When the working memory factor was restricted to any possible triplet of working memory tasks, the correlation between working memory and reasoning was inversely related to the average magnitude of the correlations among the indicators, indicating that more highly intercorrelated indicators may provide poorer coverage of the construct space. We stress the need to go beyond specific tasks and paradigms when studying higher-order cognitive constructs, such as working memory.
A growing body of experimental syntactic research has revealed substantial variation in the magnitude of island effects, not only across languages but also across different grammatical constructions. Adopting a well-established experimental design, the present study examines island effects in Spanish using a speeded acceptability judgment task. To quantify variation across grammatical constructions, we tested extraction from four different types of structure (subjects, complex noun phrases, adjuncts and interrogative clauses). The results of Bayesian mixed effects modelling showed that the size of island effects varied between constructions, such that there was clear evidence of subject, adjunct and interrogative island effects, but not of complex noun phrase island effects. We also failed to find evidence that island effects were modulated by participants’ working memory capacity as measured by an operation span task. To account for our results, we suggest that variability in island effects across constructions may be due to the interaction of syntactic, semantic-pragmatic and processing factors, which may affect island types differentially due to their idiosyncratic properties.
We examined the neural signatures of stimulus features in visual working memory (WM) by integrating functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and event-related potential data recorded during mental manipulation of colors, rotation angles, and color–angle conjunctions. The N200, negative slow wave, and P3b were modulated by the information content of WM, and an fMRI-constrained source model revealed a progression in neural activity from posterior visual areas to higher order areas in the ventral and dorsal processing streams. Color processing was associated with activity in inferior frontal gyrus during encoding and retrieval, whereas angle processing involved right parietal regions during the delay interval. WM for color–angle conjunctions did not involve any additional neural processes. The finding that different patterns of brain activity underlie WM for color and spatial information is consistent with ideas that the ventral/dorsal “what/where” segregation of perceptual processing influences WM organization. The absence of characteristic signatures of conjunction-related brain activity, which was generally intermediate between the 2 single conditions, suggests that conjunction judgments are based on the coordinated activity of these 2 streams. Keywords: EEG, fMRI, source analysis, visual, working memory
Even though extensively investigated, the nature of working memory (WM) deficits in patients with schizophrenia (PSZ) is not yet fully understood. In particular, the contribution of different WM sub-processes to the severe WM deficit observed in PSZ is a matter of debate. So far, most research has focused on impaired WM maintenance. By analyzing different types of errors in a spatial delayed response task (DRT), we have recently demonstrated that incorrect yet confident responses (which we labeled as false memory errors) rather than incorrect/not-confident responses reflect failures of WM encoding, which was also impaired in PSZ. In the present study, we provide further evidence for a functional dissociation between confident and not-confident errors by manipulating the demands on WM maintenance, i.e., the length over which information has to be maintained in WM. Furthermore, we investigate whether these functionally distinguishable WM processes are impaired in PSZ. Twenty-four PSZ and 24 demographically matched healthy controls (HC) performed a spatial DRT in which the length of the delay period was varied between 1, 2, 4, and 6 s. In each trial, participants also rated their level of response confidence. Across both groups, longer delays led to increased rates of incorrect/not-confident responses, while incorrect/confident responses were not affected by delay length. This functional dissociation provides additional support for our proposal that false memory errors (i.e., confident errors) reflect problems at the level of WM encoding, while not-confident errors reflect failures of WM maintenance. Schizophrenic patients showed increased numbers of both confident and not-confident errors, suggesting that both sub-processes of WM—encoding and maintenance—are impaired in schizophrenia. Combined with the delay length-dependent functional dissociation, we propose that these impairments in schizophrenic patients are functionally distinguishable.
Working memory (WM) performance varies substantially among individuals but the precise contribution of different WM component processes to these functional limits remains unclear. By analyzing different types of responses in a spatial WM task, we recently demonstrated a functional dissociation between confident and not-confident errors reflecting failures of WM encoding and maintenance, respectively. Here, we use event-related brain potentials to further explore this dissociation. Healthy participants performed a delayed orientation-discrimination task and rated their response confidence for each trial. The encoding-related N2pc component was significantly reduced for confident errors compared to confident correct responses, which is indicative of an encoding failure. In contrast, the maintenance-related contra-lateral delay activity was similar for these response types indicating that in confident error trials, WM representations – potentially the wrong ones – were maintained accurately and with stability throughout the delay interval. However, contra-lateral delay activity measured during the early part of the delay period was decreased for not-confident errors, potentially reflecting compromised maintenance processes. These electrophysiological findings contribute to a refined understanding of the encoding and maintenance processes that contribute to limitations in WM performance and capacity.