Literature DB >> 11409097

A controlled-attention view of working-memory capacity.

M J Kane1, M K Bleckley, A R Conway, R W Engle.   

Abstract

In 2 experiments the authors examined whether individual differences in working-memory (WM) capacity are related to attentional control. Experiment 1 tested high- and low-WM-span (high-span and low-span) participants in a prosaccade task, in which a visual cue appeared in the same location as a subsequent to-be-identified target letter, and in an antisaccade task, in which a target appeared opposite the cued location. Span groups identified targets equally well in the prosaccade task, reflecting equivalence in automatic orienting. However, low-span participants were slower and less accurate than high-span participants in the antisaccade task, reflecting differences in attentional control. Experiment 2 measured eye movements across a long antisaccade session. Low-span participants made slower and more erroneous saccades than did high-span participants. In both experiments, low-span participants performed poorly when task switching from antisaccade to prosaccade blocks. The findings support a controlled-attention view of WM capacity.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11409097     DOI: 10.1037//0096-3445.130.2.169

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen        ISSN: 0022-1015


  273 in total

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8.  Individual differences in event-based prospective memory: Evidence for multiple processes supporting cue detection.

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9.  A central capacity limit to the simultaneous storage of visual and auditory arrays in working memory.

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