Keeping memory clear and stable–the contribution of human basal ganglia and prefrontal cortex to working memory.
Successful remembering involves both hindering irrelevant information from entering working memory (WM) and actively maintaining relevant information online. Using a voxelwise lesion-behavior brain mapping approach in stroke patients, we observed that lesions of the left basal ganglia render WM susceptible to irrelevant information. Lesions of the right prefrontal cortex on the other hand make it difficult to keep more than a few items in WM. These findings support basal ganglia-prefrontal cortex models of WM whereby the basal ganglia play a gatekeeper role and allow only relevant information to enter prefrontal cortex where this information then is actively maintained in WM.
Related posts:
- “Habit” gambling behaviour caused by ischemic lesions affecting the cognitive territories of the basal ganglia.
- Dopaminergic modulation of endocannabinoid-mediated plasticity at GABAergic synapses in the prefrontal cortex.
- A transient receptor potential channel regulates basal ganglia output.
- Successful treatment of post-stroke apathy by the dopamine receptor agonist ropinirole.
- Phenotypic patterns of MELAS/LS overlap syndrome associated with m.13513GA mutation, and neuropathological findings in one autopsy case.