Alpha oscillations protect auditory working memory against distractors in the encoding phase
Tu, C.-A., Parviainen, T., Hämäläinen, J. A., & Hsu, Y.-F. (2025). Alpha oscillations protect auditory working memory against distractors in the encoding phase. Neuropsychologia, 207, Article 109058. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2024.109058
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NeuropsychologiaDate
2025Copyright
© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Alpha oscillations are proposed to serve the function of inhibition to protect items in working memory from intruding information. In a modified Sternberg paradigm, alpha power was initially found to increase at the anticipation of strong compared to weak distractors, reflecting the active gating of distracting information from interfering with the memory trace. However, there was a lack of evidence supporting the inhibition account of alpha oscillations in later studies using similar experimental design with greater temporal disparity between the encoding phase and the presentation of the distractors. This temporal disparity might have dampened the demands for inhibition. To test the hypothesis that alpha inhibition takes place when distractors are temporally close to the encoding phase, here we designed a modified Sternberg paradigm where distractors were sandwiched between targets in the encoding phase to ensure that they compete for working memory resources. Using electroencephalography (EEG), we replicated the finding that alpha power increased for strong compared to weak distractors. The effect was present throughout the encoding phase, not only upon the presentation of distractors but also before and after the presentation of distractors, providing evidence for both proactive and reactive inhibition of distractors at the neuronal level. Meanwhile, the effect was restricted to the context of high but not low target-to-distractor ratio. The results suggest that the distractors being temporally close to the encoding phase of more targets might be a boundary condition of the generation of alpha oscillations for gating.
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This work was supported by Taiwan National Science and Technology Council (Grant Number NSTC 112-2628-H-003-006 and NSTC 113-2628-H-003-001) and Taiwan Ministry of Education (Higher Education Sprout Project Grant Number 113J1E0503) to YFH and the Research Council of Finland (Grant Number 347903) to JAH.License
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