Binding in Working Memory and Long-term Memory:
Towards an Integrated Model
Murre, J. M. J., Wolters, G., & Raffone, A. (in press). Binding in Working Memory and Long-term Memory:
Towards an Integrated Model. In Zimmer et al. (Eds). In press.
In .doc format.
In .rtf format (zipped).
Abstract
Models of long-term and working memory assume various forms of binding processes.
Long-term memory consolidation involves a process whereby memory representations are
first bound by the hippocampus and certain surrounding areas. Then, a consolidation
process is assumed whereby the binding role is transferred from the hippocampus to
neocortical sites, a movement from hippocampal-cortical to cortico-cortical connectivity.
Many models of working memory assume that high levels of neural synchrony or simultaneous
firing rate represent its memory contents. Short-term binding is thus accomplished through
firing rates and temporal correlations of firing that emerge from the complex interplay of
existing connections and from the effects of the recent activation history (from ‘thinking’,
planning, perception, setting of motor movements, etc.). In a few seconds this content can
in principle be transferred to long-term memory, specifically to the hippocampus, via Hebbian
plasticity. In this paper, we will present a binding perspective from two connectionist models
developed by us: a model of binding in working memory and a model of trace binding in long-term
memory consolidation. We will delineate four different neurodynamical binding mechanisms, describe
and discuss these two models of short-term and long-term memory binding, and finally present ideas
for an integrated model architecture of binding in memory.
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