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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Gevins, A., & Smith, M.E. (2000). Neurophysiological
measures of working memory and individual differences in cognitive
ability and cognitive style. Cerebral Cortex, 10, 829-839.
ABSTRACT
The capacity to deliberately control attention
in order to hold and manipulate information in working memory is
critical to higher cognitive functions. This suggests that between-subject
differences in general cognitive ability might be related to observable
differences in the activity of brain systems that support working
memory and attention control. To test this notion, electroencephalograms
were recorded from 80 healthy young adults during spatial working
memory tasks. Measures of task-related neurophysiological and behavioral
variables were derived from these data and compared to scores on
a test battery commonly used to assess general cognitive ability
(the WAIS-R). Subjects who scored high on the psychometric test
also tended to respond faster in the experimental tasks without
any loss of accuracy. The amplitude of the late positive component
of the event-related potential was larger in high ability subjects,
and the frontal midline theta component of the EEG signal was also
selectively enhanced in this group under conditions of sustained
performance and high working memory load. These results suggest
that subjects who scored high on the WAIS-R were better able to
focus and sustain attention to task performance. Changes in the
EEG alpha rhythm in response to manipulations of task practice and
load were also examined and compared between frontal and parietal
regions. The results indicated that high ability subjects developed
strategies that made relatively greater use of parietal regions,
whereas low ability subjects relied more exclusively on frontal
regions. Other analyses indicated that hemispheric asymmetries in
alpha band measures distinguish between individuals with relatively
high verbal aptitude and those with relatively high nonverbal aptitude.
In particular, subjects with a verbal cognitive style tended to
make greater use of the left parietal region during task performance,
and subjects with a nonverbal style tended to make greater use of
the right parietal region. These results help clarify relationships
between task-related brain activity and individual differences in
cognitive ability and style.
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