Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/29465
Title: Exploring the sensory recruitment framework : the role of the sensory visual cortex in visual short-term memory
Authors: Phylactou, Phivos 
Keywords: visual short-term memory;working memory;sensory visual cortex;sensory recruitment;visual cortex
Advisor: Konstantinou, Nikos
Issue Date: May-2023
Department: Department of Rehabilitation Sciences
Faculty: Faculty of Health Sciences
Abstract: The sensory visual cortex (SVC) is involved in encoding information in visual short-term memory (VSTM). Yet, it remains unclear if the SVC is a necessary component of the brain network necessary for maintaining information in VSTM. The aim of this thesis was to shed light on the debated role of the SVC in VSTM. Thus, I focused on transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). TMS uses a coil to transfer electromagnetic stimulation at localized brain areas making the exploration of causal evidence plausible. Through a systematic review and meta-analysis of previous SVC TMS studies I indicated that the SVC is similarly involved in both the encoding and maintenance VSTM phase, and that the controversy was likely due to methodological issues in TMS studies. Building on these findings I conducted two TMS experiments that covered the previous methodological oversights by ensuring the monocular presentation of orientation stimuli. TMS was delivered at different times during the maintenance phase of a delayed change-detection VSTM task, on one side of the occipital hemisphere. Decreased VSTM performance in the ipsilateral occipital hemisphere to visual hemifield, and in the real TMS (compared to sham TMS) condition indicated inhibitory TMS effects, and thus, a causal involvement of the SVC during VSTM maintenance. After establishing the role of the SVC in VSTM maintenance through TMS, I turned to memory load manipulations to further investigate the relationship between short-term memory and perception. I combined short-term memory tasks with perceptual detection tasks, where I manipulated the sensory load of the memory items and measured the effect of this load manipulation on perceptual detection. A combined VSTM and visual perception task provided additional evidence in favor of the sensory recruitment framework, since visual detection was reduced due to the increased VSTM load. Evidence against any cross-modal effects between VSTM and auditory perception was found, and evidence from a combined auditory short-term memory and auditory perception task indicated that sensory recruitment was not supported for the auditory modality. Overall, my findings support the sensory recruitment framework of VSTM, which proposes that sensory visual areas have a dual function: they are involved in the precise sensory encoding of elemental visual features and the short-term maintenance of this information.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/29465
Rights: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Type: PhD Thesis
Affiliation: Cyprus University of Technology 
Appears in Collections:Διδακτορικές Διατριβές/ PhD Theses

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