NeuroImage (Nov 2022)
Oscillatory delta and theta frequencies differentially support multiple items encoding to optimize memory performance during the digit span task
Abstract
The human brain has limited storage capacity often challenging the encoding and recall of a long series of multiple items. Different encoding strategies are therefore employed to optimize performance in memory processes such as chunking where particular items are ‘grouped’ to reduce the number of items to store artificially. Additionally, related to the position of an item within a series, there is a tendency to remember the first and last items on the list better than the middle ones, which calls the “serial position effect”. Although relatively well-established in behavioral research, the neuronal mechanisms underlying such encoding strategies and memory effects remain poorly understood. Here, we used event-related EEG oscillation analyses to unravel the neuronal substrates of serial encoding strategies and effects during the behaviorally controlled execution of the digit span task. We recorded EEG in forty-four healthy young-adult participants during a backward digit span (ds) task with two difficulty levels (i.e., 3-ds and 5-ds). Participants were asked to recall the digits in reverse order after the presentation of each set. We analyzed the pattern of event-related delta and theta oscillatory power in the time-frequency domain over fronto-central and parieto-occipital areas during the item (digit) list encoding, focusing on how these oscillatory responses changed with each subsequent digit being encoded in the series. Results showed that the development of event-related delta power evoked by digits in each series matched the ‘serial position curve’, with higher delta power being present during the first, and especially last, digits as compared to digits presented in the middle of a set, for both difficulty levels. Event-related theta power, in contrast, rather resembled a neural correlate of a chunking pattern where, during the 5-ds encoding, a clear change in event-related theta occurred around the third/fourth positions, with decreasing power values for later digits. This suggests that different oscillatory mechanisms linked to different frequency bands may code for the different encoding strategies and effects in serial item presentation. Furthermore, recall-EEG correlations suggested that participants with higher fronto-central delta responses during digit encoding showed also higher recall scores. The here presented findings contribute to our understanding of the neural oscillatory mechanisms underlying multiple item encoding, directly informing recent efforts towards memory enhancement through targeted oscillation-based neuromodulation.