Hierarchical process memory: memory as an integral component of information processing.

Publication Year
2015

Type

Journal Article
Abstract

Models of working memory (WM) commonly focus on how information is encoded into and retrieved from storage at specific moments. However, in the majority of real-life processes, past information is used continuously to process incoming information across multiple timescales. Considering single-unit, electrocorticography, and functional imaging data, we argue that (i) virtually all cortical circuits can accumulate information over time, and (ii) the timescales of accumulation vary hierarchically, from early sensory areas with short processing timescales (10s to 100s of milliseconds) to higher-order areas with long processing timescales (many seconds to minutes). In this hierarchical systems perspective, memory is not restricted to a few localized stores, but is intrinsic to information processing that unfolds throughout the brain on multiple timescales.

Journal
Trends in cognitive sciences
Volume
19
Issue
6
Pages
304-13
ISSN Number
1879-307X
Alternate Journal
Trends Cogn Sci
PMID
25980649