Early Visual Cortex Represents Sensory and Mnemonic Orientations in Separate Subspaces with Preserved Geometry

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Abstract How early visual cortex (EVC) represents working memory (WM) content while continuing to process incoming sensory input remains unclear. Using fMRI with prolonged delays to isolate mnemonic activity, together with analyses of cross-decoding, low-dimensional subspace structure, and representational geometry, we examined the relationship between sensory and mnemonic orientation representations in human EVC. Cross-decoding generalized poorly between sensory and mnemonic epochs, but this did not imply unrelated codes. Rather, the two occupied separable low-dimensional subspaces while preserving representational geometry across epochs. During discrimination and estimation, sensory- and mnemonic-trained decoders yielded dissociable readouts of concurrent sensory and mnemonic information from the same EVC measurements. Mnemonic coding showed little dependence on the retinotopic radial bias that characterized sensory coding, and trial-by-trial variability in mnemonic representation predicted both discrimination choices and estimation reports. Our findings support a population-level account in which mnemonic information in EVC is re-expressed in a separable but geometrically preserved format. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00