| Literature DB >> 28074450 |
Edyta Sasin1, Candice C Morey2, Mark Nieuwenstein3.
Abstract
Previous studies on directed forgetting in visual working memory (VWM) have shown that, if people are cued to remember only a subset of the items currently held in VWM, they will completely forget the uncued, no longer relevant items. While this finding is indicative of selective remembering, it remains unclear whether directed forgetting can also occur in the absence of any concurrent to-be-remembered information. In the current study, we addressed this matter by asking participants to memorize a single object that could be followed by a cue to forget or remember this object. Following the cue, we assessed the object's activation in VWM by determining whether a matching distractor would capture attention in a visual search task. The results showed that, compared to a cue to remember, a cue to forget led to a reduced likelihood of attentional capture by a matching distractor. In addition, we found that capture effects by to-be-remembered and to-be-forgotten distractors remained stable as the interval between the onset of the cue and the search task increased from 700 ms to 3900 ms. We conclude that, in the absence of any to-be-remembered objects, an instruction to forget an object held in WM leads to a rapid but incomplete deactivation of the representation of that object, thus allowing it to continue to produce a weak biasing effect on attentional selection for several seconds after the instruction to forget.Entities:
Keywords: Attentional capture; Directed forgetting; Working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28074450 PMCID: PMC5643359 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-016-1225-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384
Fig. 1Illustration of the task used in Experiment 1 and Experiment 2. Presentation of memory object was followed by the word cue (forget or remember). After variable ISI (200 ms, 600 ms, 1000 ms or 1400 ms in Experiment 1 and 200 ms, 600 ms, 2000 ms or 3400 ms in Experiment 2, participants performed the search task. The memory task was present only on trials with the cue remember
Fig. 2Results of Experiment 1. Mean RTs (ms) in the search task as a function of cue condition, match condition and the ISI (A). Mean RTs (ms) in the search task as a function of cue condition and ISI (B). Mean RTs (ms) in the search task as a function of cue condition and match condition (C). Error bars within-subject standard errors of the mean (Morey, 2008)
Fig. 3Results of Experiment 2. Mean RTs (ms) in the search task as a function of cue condition, match condition and the ISI (A). Mean RTs (ms) in the search task as a function of cue condition and ISI (B). Mean RTs (ms) in the search task as a function of cue condition and match condition (C). Error bars within-subject standard errors of the mean (Morey, 2008)