A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal

Working memory training mostly engages general-purpose large-scale networks for learning




AuthorsJuha Salmitaival, Lars Nyberg, Matti Laine

PublisherElsevier Ltd

Publication year2018

JournalNeuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews

Journal name in sourceNeuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews

Volume93

First page 108

Last page122

Number of pages15

ISSN0149-7634

eISSN1873-7528

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2018.03.019


Abstract

The present meta-analytic study examined brain activation changes following working memory (WM) training, a form of cognitive training that has attracted considerable interest. Comparisons with perceptual-motor (PM) learning revealed that WM training engages domain-general large-scale networks for learning encompassing the dorsal attention and salience networks, sensory areas, and striatum. Also the dynamics of the training-induced brain activation changes within these networks showed a high overlap between WM and PM training. The distinguishing feature for WM training was the consistent modulation of the dorso- and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC/VLPFC) activity. The strongest candidate for mediating transfer to similar untrained WM tasks was the frontostriatal system, showing higher striatal and VLPFC activations, and lower DLPFC activations after training. Modulation of transfer-related areas occurred mostly with longer training periods. Overall, our findings place WM training effects into a general perception-action cycle, where some modulations may depend on the specific cognitive demands of a training task.



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