A matter of availability: sharper tuning for memorized than for perceived stimulus features

Publication date

2023-06-15

Authors

Chota, SamsonISNI 0000000506355221
Gayet, SuryaORCID 0000-0001-9728-1272ISNI 000000037261256X
Kenemans, J. LeonISNI 0000000390041596
Olivers, Christian N L
van der Stigchel, StefanISNI 0000000396732697

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Our visual environment is relatively stable over time. An optimized visual system could capitalize on this by devoting less representational resources to objects that are physically present. The vividness of subjective experience, however, suggests that externally available (perceived) information is more strongly represented in neural signals than memorized information. To distinguish between these opposing predictions, we use EEG multivariate pattern analysis to quantify the representational strength of task-relevant features in anticipation of a change-detection task. Perceptual availability was manipulated between experimental blocks by either keeping the stimulus available on the screen during a 2-s delay period (perception) or removing it shortly after its initial presentation (memory). We find that task-relevant (attended) memorized features are more strongly represented than irrelevant (unattended) features. More importantly, we find that task-relevant features evoke significantly weaker representations when they are perceptually available compared with when they are unavailable. These findings demonstrate that, contrary to what subjective experience suggests, vividly perceived stimuli elicit weaker neural representations (in terms of detectable multivariate information) than the same stimuli maintained in visual working memory. We hypothesize that an efficient visual system spends little of its limited resources on the internal representation of information that is externally available anyway.

Keywords

EEG multivariate pattern analysis, embodied cognition, perception, working memory, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Cognitive Neuroscience

Citation

Chota, S, Gayet, S, Kenemans, J L, Olivers, C N L & Stigchel, S V D 2023, 'A matter of availability: sharper tuning for memorized than for perceived stimulus features', Cerebral Cortex, vol. 33, no. 12, pp. 7608-7618. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhad064