Literature DB >> 28252987

Accessibility limits recall from visual working memory.

Jason Rajsic1, Garrett Swan2, Daryl E Wilson3, Jay Pratt1.   

Abstract

In this article, we demonstrate limitations of accessibility of information in visual working memory (VWM). Recently, cued-recall has been used to estimate the fidelity of information in VWM, where the feature of a cued object is reproduced from memory (Bays, Catalao, & Husain, 2009; Wilken & Ma, 2004; Zhang & Luck, 2008). Response error in these tasks has been largely studied with respect to failures of encoding and maintenance; however, the retrieval operations used in these tasks remain poorly understood. By varying the number and type of object features provided as a cue in a visual delayed-estimation paradigm, we directly assess the nature of retrieval errors in delayed estimation from VWM. Our results demonstrate that providing additional object features in a single cue reliably improves recall, largely by reducing swap, or misbinding, responses. In addition, performance simulations using the binding pool model (Swan & Wyble, 2014) were able to mimic this pattern of performance across a large span of parameter combinations, demonstrating that the binding pool provides a possible mechanism underlying this pattern of results that is not merely a symptom of one particular parametrization. We conclude that accessing visual working memory is a noisy process, and can lead to errors over and above those of encoding and maintenance limitations. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28252987     DOI: 10.1037/xlm0000387

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn        ISSN: 0278-7393            Impact factor:   3.051


  2 in total

1.  Mechanisms of feature binding in visual working memory are stable over long delays.

Authors:  Georgina Brown; Iham Kasem; Paul M Bays; Sebastian Schneegans
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 2.240

2.  Location-independent feature binding in visual working memory for sequentially presented objects.

Authors:  Sebastian Schneegans; William J Harrison; Paul M Bays
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2021-04-16       Impact factor: 2.199

  2 in total

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