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      Working memory in primate sensory systems.

      Nature reviews. Neuroscience
      Animals, Auditory Perception, physiology, Cerebral Cortex, anatomy & histology, Humans, Memory, Short-Term, Nerve Net, Neural Networks (Computer), Primates, Visual Perception

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          Abstract

          Sensory working memory consists of the short-term storage of sensory stimuli to guide behaviour. There is increasing evidence that elemental sensory dimensions - such as object motion in the visual system or the frequency of a sound in the auditory system - are stored by segregated feature-selective systems that include not only the prefrontal and parietal cortex, but also areas of sensory cortex that carry out relatively early stages of processing. These circuits seem to have a dual function: precise sensory encoding and short-term storage of this information. New results provide insights into how activity in these circuits represents the remembered sensory stimuli.

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