Authors
Ingmar EJ de Vries, Heleen A Slagter, Christian NL Olivers
Publication date
2020/2/1
Source
Trends in cognitive sciences
Volume
24
Issue
2
Pages
150-162
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
In the visual world, attention is guided by perceptual goals activated in visual working memory (VWM). However, planning multiple-task sequences also requires VWM to store representations for future goals. These future goals need to be prevented from interfering with the current perceptual task. Recent findings have implicated neural oscillations as a control mechanism serving the implementation and switching of different states of prioritization of VWM representations. We review recent evidence that posterior alpha-band oscillations underlie the flexible activation and deactivation of VWM representations and that frontal delta-to-theta-band oscillations play a role in the executive control of this process. That is, frontal delta-to-theta appears to orchestrate posterior alpha through long-range oscillatory networks to flexibly set up and change VWM states during multitask sequences.
Total citations
20192020202120222023202421430352720
Scholar articles
IEJ de Vries, HA Slagter, CNL Olivers - Trends in cognitive sciences, 2020