| Literature DB >> 32601295 |
Michael J King1, Brooke N Macnamara2.
Abstract
How many items can we store in visual working memory while simultaneously conducting a visual search? Previous research has proposed that during concurrent visual search, only one visual working memory representation can be activated to directly influence attention. This previous research suggests that other visual working memory representations are "accessory items", which have little direct influence on attention. However, recent findings provided evidence that not one, but two visual working memory representations can capture attention and interfere with concurrent visual search. We successfully replicate these findings, and further test whether the capacity of visual working memory during visual search extends to not two, but three representations that influence attention directly. We find evidence that three visual working memory representations can simultaneously control attention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32601295 PMCID: PMC7324568 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-67455-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of trial events and results for Experiment 1. (a) Trial display with four different possible distractor conditions per trial for the single-item memory condition (the “Cued distractor”: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the Cued memorized item; the “Uncued distractor” [shown here]: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the uncued memorized item; the “New distractor”: the distractor circle was a different color and texture from the circles presented at the beginning of the trial; the “None distractor”: no distractor circle appeared, all seven circles were gray). (b) RTs for the search display as a function of distractor condition in the single cued memory item condition. (c) Trial display with four different possible distractor conditions per trial for the two-item memory condition (the “M1 distractor” [shown here]: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the memorized item on the left; the “M2 distractor”: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the memorized item on the right; the “New distractor” and “None distractor” conditions were the same as their counterparts in the single-item memory condition). (d) RTs for the search display as a function of distractor condition in the two-item memory condition. Error bars indicate ± 1 standard errors of the mean.
Reaction times (s) for Experiment 1’s visual search test across all conditions.
| Memory condition | Distractor condition | |
|---|---|---|
| Single-item memory | Cued | 1.14 (0.226) |
| Uncued | 1.02 (0.229) | |
| New | 1.06 (0.215) | |
| None | 0.91 (0.184) | |
| Two-item memory | M1 | 1.36 (0.356) |
| M2 | 1.37 (0.349) | |
| New | 1.20 (0.297) | |
| None | 1.11 (0.290) |
MCI value (s) for Experiment 1’s visual search test across all conditions.
| Memory condition | Distractor condition | |
|---|---|---|
| Single-item memory | MCI cued | 0.31 (0.290) |
| Two-item memory | MCI M1 | 0.76 (0.770) |
| MCI M2 | 0.70 (0.529) |
Figure 2Schematic of trial events and results for Experiment 2. (a) Trial display with four different possible distractor conditions per trial for the two-item memory condition (the “M1 distractor” [shown here]: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the memorized item on the top left; the “M2 distractor”: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the memorized item on the top right; the “Uncued distractor”: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the uncued memorized item; the “New distractor”: the distractor circle was different from the circles presented at the beginning of the trial; the “None distractor”: no distractor circle appeared, all seven circles were gray). (b) RTs for the search display as a function of distractor condition in the two-item memory condition. (c) Trial display with five different possible distractor conditions per trial for the three-item memory condition (the “M1 distractor” [shown here], “M2 distractor”, “New distractor”, and “None distractor” are the same as in the two memory items condition; the “M3 distractor”: the circle’s color and texture were identical to the memorized item on the bottom). (d) RTs for the search display as a function of distractor condition in the three-item memory condition. Error bars indicate ± 1 standard errors of the mean.
Accuracy results for visual search and memory test in Experiment 1.
| Condition | Mean visual search accuracy (SD) | Mean memory test accuracy (SD) |
|---|---|---|
| Single-item memory | 0.97 (0.03) | 0.76 (0.09) |
| Two-item memory | 0.96 (0.03) | 0.74 (0.08) |
Reaction times (s) for Experiment 2’s visual search test across all conditions.
| Memory condition | Distractor condition | |
|---|---|---|
| Two-item memory | M1 | 1.33 (0.354) |
| M2 | 1.34 (0.343) | |
| Uncued | 1.18 (0.332) | |
| New | 1.17 (0.299) | |
| None | 1.09 (0.184) | |
| Three-item memory | M1 | 1.45 (0.249) |
| M2 | 1.44 (0.234) | |
| M3 | 1.43 (0.205) | |
| New | 1.04 (0.204) | |
| None | 0.89 (0.222) |
MCI value (s) for Experiment 2′s visual search test across all conditions.
| Memory condition | Distractor condition | |
|---|---|---|
| Two-item memory | MCI M1 | 0.82 (1.07) |
| MCI M2 | 0.87 (0.983) | |
| Three-item memory | MCI M1 | 2.02 (1.11) |
| MCI M2 | 2.06 (0.732) | |
| MCI M3 | 1.97 (1.33) |
Accuracy results for visual search and memory test in Experiment 2.
| Condition | Mean visual search accuracy (SD) | Mean memory test accuracy (SD) |
|---|---|---|
| Two-item memory | 0.92 (0.10) | 0.81 (0.12) |
| Three-item memory | 0.90 (0.12) | 0.76 (0.09) |
Experiment 1 distractor types.
| Distractor condition | Description |
|---|---|
| Cued distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the cued item |
| Uncued distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the uncued item |
| New distractor | Circle’s color and texture are different from the cued and uncued items |
| No distractor | No circle with color or texture is present |
| M1 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the left |
| M2 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the right |
| New distractor | Circle’s color and texture are different from the cued and uncued items |
| No distractor | No circle with color or texture is present |
Experiment 2 distractor types.
| Distractor condition | Description |
|---|---|
| M1 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the top-left |
| M2 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the top-right |
| Uncued distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the uncued item |
| New distractor | Circle’s color and texture are different from the M1, M2, and uncued items |
| No distractor | No circle with color or texture is present |
| M1 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the top-left |
| M2 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the top-right |
| M3 distractor | Circle’s color and texture are the same as the item presented on the bottom |
| New distractor | Circle’s color and texture are different from the cued and uncued items |
| No distractor | No circle with color or texture is present |