Memory Maintenance,” Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience 4, no. 4 (2004): 580–599.
66
T. P. Zanto, M. T. Rubens, A. Thangavel, and A. Gazzaley, “Causal Role of the Prefrontal Cortex in Top-Down Modulation of Visual Processing and Working Memory,” Nature Neuroscience 14, no. 5 (2011): 656–661.
67
C. F. Jacobsen, “Studies of Cerebral Function in Primates,” Comparative Psychology Monographs 13 (1938): 1–68.
68
J. M. Fuster and G. E. Alexander, “Neuron Activity Related to Short-Term Memory,” Science 173, no. 3997 (1971): 652–654; K. Kubota and H. Niki, “Prefrontal Cortical Unit Activity and Delayed Alternation Performance in Monkeys,” Journal of Neurophysiology 34 (1971): 337–347.
69
P. S. Goldman-Rakic, “Cellular Basis of Working Memory,” Neuron 14, no. 3 (1995): 477–485.
70
J. M. Fuster, R. H. Bauer, and J. P. Jervey, “Functional Interactions between Inferotemporal and Prefrontal Cortex in a Cognitive Task,” Brain Research 330, no. 2 (1985): 299–307.
71
P. E. Dux, J. Ivanoff, C. L. Asplund, and R. Marois, “Isolation of a Central Bottleneck of Information Processing with Time-Resolved fMRI,” Neuron 52, no. 6 (2006): 1109–1120.
72
P. E. Dux, J. Ivanoff, C. L. Asplund, and R. Marois, “Isolation of a Central Bottleneck of Information Processing with Time-Resolved fMRI,” Neuron 52, no. 6 (2006): 1109–1120.
73
R. Kanai, M. Y. Dong, B. Bahrami, and G. Rees, “Distractibility in Daily Life Is Reflected in the Structure and Function of Human Parietal Cortex,” Journal of Neuroscience 31, no. 18 (2011): 6620–6626.
74
R. Desimone and J. Duncan, “Neural Mechanisms of Selective Visual Attention,” Annual Review of Neuroscience 18, no. 1 (1995): 193–222.
75
T. P. Zanto and A. Gazzaley, “Neural Suppression of Irrelevant Information Underlies Optimal Working Memory Performance,” Journal of Neuroscience 29, no. 10 (2009): 3059–3066.
76
E. K. Vogel, A. W. McCollough, and M. G. Machizawa, “Neural Measures Reveal Individual Differences in Controlling Access to Working Memory,” Nature 438, no. 7067 (2005): 500–503.
77
A. M. Glenberg, J. L. Schroeder, and D. A. Robertson, “Averting the Gaze Disengages the Environment and Facilitates Remembering,” Memory and Cognition 26 (1998): 651–658.
78
P. E. Wais, M. T. Rubens, J. Boccanfuso, and A. Gazzaley, “Neural Mechanisms Underlying the Impact of Visual Distraction on Retrieval of Long-Term Memory,” Journal of Neuroscience 30, no. 25 (2010): 8541–8550.