Contralateral delay activity and alpha lateralization reflect retinotopic and screen-centered reference frames in visual memory

Prog Neurobiol. 2024 Mar:234:102576. doi: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2024.102576. Epub 2024 Feb 1.

Abstract

The visual system represents objects in a lateralized manner, with contralateral cortical hemispheres responsible for left and right visual hemifields. This organization extends to visual short-term memory (VSTM), as evidenced by electrophysiological indices of VSTM maintenance: contralateral delay activity (CDA) and alpha-band lateralization. However, it remains unclear if VSTM represents object locations in gaze-centered (retinotopic) or screen-centered (spatiotopic) coordinates, especially after eye movements. In two experiments, participants encoded the colors of target objects and made a lateral saccade during the maintenance interval, thereby shifting the object's location on the retina. A non-lateralized probe stimulus was then presented at the new fixation for a change detection task. The CDA maintained lateralization towards the target's original retinotopic location, unaffected by subsequent saccades, and did not invert polarity even when a saccade brought that location into the opposite hemifield. We also found conventional alpha lateralization towards the target's location before a saccade. After a saccade, however, alpha was lateralized towards the screen center regardless of the target's original location, even in a control condition without any memory requirements. This suggests that post-saccadic alpha-band lateralization reflects attentional processes unrelated to memory, while pre- and post-saccade CDA reflect VSTM maintenance in a retinotopic reference frame.

Keywords: Capacity; EEG; Eye movements; Remapping; Visual short-term memory.

MeSH terms

  • Attention / physiology
  • Eye Movements*
  • Humans
  • Memory, Short-Term / physiology
  • Retina
  • Saccades*