Literature DB >> 25564523

Amnesia for object attributes: failure to report attended information that had just reached conscious awareness.

Hui Chen1, Brad Wyble2.   

Abstract

People intuitively believe that when they become consciously aware of a visual stimulus, they will be able to remember it and immediately report it. The present study provides a series of striking demonstrations of behavior that is inconsistent with such an intuition. Four experiments showed that in certain conditions, participants could not report an attribute (e.g., letter identity) of a stimulus even when that attribute had been attended and had reached a full state of conscious awareness just prior to being questioned about it. We term this effect attribute amnesia, and it occurs when participants repeatedly locate a target using one attribute and are then unexpectedly asked to report that attribute. This discovery suggests that attention to and awareness of a stimulus attribute are insufficient to ensure its immediate reportability. These results imply that when attention is configured by using an attribute for target selection, that attribute will not necessarily be remembered.
© The Author(s) 2015.

Entities:  

Keywords:  attention; attribute amnesia; awareness; open data; working memory

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25564523     DOI: 10.1177/0956797614560648

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  17 in total

1.  Does attribute amnesia occur with the presentation of complex, meaningful stimuli? The answer is, "it depends".

Authors:  Hui Chen; Jiahan Yu; Yingtao Fu; Ping Zhu; Wei Li; Jifan Zhou; Mowei Shen
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2019-08

2.  Learning how to exploit sources of information.

Authors:  Brad Wyble; Michael Hess; Ryan E O'Donnell; Hui Chen; Baruch Eitam
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2019-05

3.  Both feature comparisons and location comparisons are subject to bias.

Authors:  Ailsa Humphries; Zhe Chen; Kyle R Cave
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2021-01-03       Impact factor: 2.199

4.  Using the attribute amnesia paradigm to test the automatic memory advantage of person names.

Authors:  Yueyao Liu; Can Huang; Xiaomin Huang; Hui Chen; Pengmin Qin
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2021-07-12

5.  And like that, they were gone: A failure to remember recently attended unique faces.

Authors:  Joyce Tam; Michael K Mugno; Ryan E O'Donnell; Brad Wyble
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2021-07-08

Review 6.  Does consciousness overflow cognitive access? Novel insights from the new phenomenon of attribute amnesia.

Authors:  Yingtao Fu; Wenchen Yan; Mowei Shen; Hui Chen
Journal:  Sci China Life Sci       Date:  2021-01-27       Impact factor: 6.038

7.  The road to long-term memory: Top-down attention is more effective than bottom-up attention for forming long-term memories.

Authors:  Edyta Sasin; Daryl Fougnie
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2021-01-14

8.  Perceptual distraction causes visual memory encoding intrusions.

Authors:  Blaire Dube; Julie D Golomb
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2021-05-23

9.  No explicit memory for individual trial display configurations in a visual search task.

Authors:  Ryan E O'Donnell; Hui Chen; Brad Wyble
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2021-06-07

10.  Object-based Encoding in Visual Working Memory: Evidence from Memory-driven Attentional Capture.

Authors:  Zaifeng Gao; Shixian Yu; Chengfeng Zhu; Rende Shui; Xuchu Weng; Peng Li; Mowei Shen
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-03-09       Impact factor: 4.379

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