TY - JOUR T1 - Tracking Real-Time Changes in Working Memory Updating and Gating with the Event-Based Eye-Blink Rate JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/098103 SP - 098103 AU - Rachel Rac-Lubashevsky AU - Heleen A. Slagter AU - Yoav Kessler Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/03/07/098103.abstract N2 - Effective working memory (WM) functioning depends on the gating process that regulates the balance between maintenance and updating of WM. The present study used the event-based eye-blink rate (ebEBR), which presumably reflects phasic striatal dopamine activity, to examine how the cognitive processes of gating and updating separately facilitate flexible updating of WM contents and the potential involvement of dopamine in these processes. Realtime changes in eye blinks were tracked during performance on the reference-back task, in which demands on these two processes were independently manipulated. In all three experiments, trials that required WM updating and trials that required gate switching were both associated with increased ebEBR. These results may support the prefrontal cortex basal ganglia WM model (PBWM) by linking updating and gating to striatal dopaminergic activity. In Experiment 3, the ebEBR was used to determine what triggers gate switching. We found that switching to an updating mode (gate opening) was more stimulus driven and retroactive than switching to a maintenance mode, which was more context driven. Together, these findings show that the ebEBR – an inexpensive, non-invasive, easy-to-use measure – can be used to track changes in WM demands during task performance and, hence, possibly striatal dopamine activity. ER -