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The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity

This study aimed to investigate if two weeks of working memory (WM) training on a progressive N-back task can generate changes in the activity of the underlying WM neural network. Forty-six healthy volunteers (23 training and 23 controls) were asked to perform the N-back task during three fMRI scann...

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Autores principales: Nęcka, Edward, Gruszka, Aleksandra, Hampshire, Adam, Sarzyńska-Wawer, Justyna, Anicai, Andreea-Elena, Orzechowski, Jarosław, Nowak, Michał, Wójcik, Natalia, Sandrone, Stefano, Soreq, Eyal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7911688/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33503877
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11020155
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author Nęcka, Edward
Gruszka, Aleksandra
Hampshire, Adam
Sarzyńska-Wawer, Justyna
Anicai, Andreea-Elena
Orzechowski, Jarosław
Nowak, Michał
Wójcik, Natalia
Sandrone, Stefano
Soreq, Eyal
author_facet Nęcka, Edward
Gruszka, Aleksandra
Hampshire, Adam
Sarzyńska-Wawer, Justyna
Anicai, Andreea-Elena
Orzechowski, Jarosław
Nowak, Michał
Wójcik, Natalia
Sandrone, Stefano
Soreq, Eyal
author_sort Nęcka, Edward
collection PubMed
description This study aimed to investigate if two weeks of working memory (WM) training on a progressive N-back task can generate changes in the activity of the underlying WM neural network. Forty-six healthy volunteers (23 training and 23 controls) were asked to perform the N-back task during three fMRI scanning sessions: (1) before training, (2) after the half of training sessions, and (3) at the end. Between the scanning sessions, the experimental group underwent a 10-session training of working memory with the use of an adaptive version of the N-back task, while the control group did not train anything. The N-back task in the scanning sessions was relatively easy (n = 2) in order to ensure high accuracy and a lack of between-group differences at the behavioral level. Such training-induced differences in neural efficiency were expected. Behavioral analyses revealed improved performance of both groups on the N-back task. However, these improvements resulted from the test-retest effect, not the training outside scanner. Performance on the non-trained stop-signal task did not demonstrate any transfer effect. Imaging analysis showed changes in activation in several significant clusters, with overlapping regions of interest in the frontal and parietal lobes. However, patterns of between-session changes of activation did not show any effect of training. The only finding that can be linked with training consists in strengthening the correlation between task performance accuracy and activation of the parietal regions of the neural network subserving working memory (left superior parietal lobule and right supramarginal gyrus posterior). These results suggest that the effects of WM training consist in learning that, in order to ensure high accuracy in the criterion task, activation of the parietal regions implicated in working memory updating must rise.
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spelling pubmed-79116882021-02-28 The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity Nęcka, Edward Gruszka, Aleksandra Hampshire, Adam Sarzyńska-Wawer, Justyna Anicai, Andreea-Elena Orzechowski, Jarosław Nowak, Michał Wójcik, Natalia Sandrone, Stefano Soreq, Eyal Brain Sci Article This study aimed to investigate if two weeks of working memory (WM) training on a progressive N-back task can generate changes in the activity of the underlying WM neural network. Forty-six healthy volunteers (23 training and 23 controls) were asked to perform the N-back task during three fMRI scanning sessions: (1) before training, (2) after the half of training sessions, and (3) at the end. Between the scanning sessions, the experimental group underwent a 10-session training of working memory with the use of an adaptive version of the N-back task, while the control group did not train anything. The N-back task in the scanning sessions was relatively easy (n = 2) in order to ensure high accuracy and a lack of between-group differences at the behavioral level. Such training-induced differences in neural efficiency were expected. Behavioral analyses revealed improved performance of both groups on the N-back task. However, these improvements resulted from the test-retest effect, not the training outside scanner. Performance on the non-trained stop-signal task did not demonstrate any transfer effect. Imaging analysis showed changes in activation in several significant clusters, with overlapping regions of interest in the frontal and parietal lobes. However, patterns of between-session changes of activation did not show any effect of training. The only finding that can be linked with training consists in strengthening the correlation between task performance accuracy and activation of the parietal regions of the neural network subserving working memory (left superior parietal lobule and right supramarginal gyrus posterior). These results suggest that the effects of WM training consist in learning that, in order to ensure high accuracy in the criterion task, activation of the parietal regions implicated in working memory updating must rise. MDPI 2021-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7911688/ /pubmed/33503877 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11020155 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Nęcka, Edward
Gruszka, Aleksandra
Hampshire, Adam
Sarzyńska-Wawer, Justyna
Anicai, Andreea-Elena
Orzechowski, Jarosław
Nowak, Michał
Wójcik, Natalia
Sandrone, Stefano
Soreq, Eyal
The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity
title The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity
title_full The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity
title_fullStr The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity
title_short The Effects of Working Memory Training on Brain Activity
title_sort effects of working memory training on brain activity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7911688/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33503877
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11020155
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