Literature DB >> 25621412

Interfering with memory for faces: The cost of doing two things at once.

Jeffrey D Wammes1, Myra A Fernandes1.   

Abstract

We inferred the processes critical for episodic retrieval of faces by measuring susceptibility to memory interference from different distracting tasks. Experiment 1 examined recognition of studied faces under full attention (FA) or each of two divided attention (DA) conditions requiring concurrent decisions to auditorily presented letters. Memory was disrupted in both DA relative to FA conditions, a result contrary to a material-specific account of interference effects. Experiment 2 investigated whether the magnitude of interference depended on competition between concurrent tasks for common processing resources. Studied faces were presented either upright (configurally processed) or inverted (featurally processed). Recognition was completed under FA, or DA with one of two face-based distracting tasks requiring either featural or configural processing. We found an interaction: memory for upright faces was lower under DA when the distracting task required configural than featural processing, while the reverse was true for memory of inverted faces. Across experiments, the magnitude of memory interference was similar (a 19% or 20% decline from FA) regardless of whether the materials in the distracting task overlapped with the to-be-remembered information. Importantly, interference was significantly larger (42%) when the processing demands of the distracting and target retrieval task overlapped, suggesting a processing-specific account of memory interference.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Configural; Divided attention; Episodic memory; Featural; Interference

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25621412     DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2014.998240

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Memory        ISSN: 0965-8211


  4 in total

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  4 in total

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