| Literature DB >> 34046872 |
Ying Zhou1, Fan Wu1, Xueyi Wan1, Mowei Shen2, Zaifeng Gao3.
Abstract
Recent studies have examined the role of attention in retaining bound representations in working memory (WM) and found that object-based attention plays a pivotal role. However, no study has investigated whether maintaining bound representations with more features in WM requires extra object-based attention. We investigated this by examining whether a secondary task consuming object-based attention was more disruptive to the maintenance of bindings in WM when more features were stored per object. We instructed participants to memorize three bound representations in a WM task while manipulating the number of features (two vs. three features) contained in each representation. Moreover, we manipulated whether a secondary task consuming object-based attention was interpolated into the maintenance phase of WM. If extra object-based attention was required after the addition of an extra feature in the bound representation, the secondary task would result in a greater disruption of the three- rather than two-featured binding. In two experiments, we found that the added secondary task significantly impaired the binding performance, but the performance of the two- and three-featured bindings was disrupted to the same extent. These results suggest that the presence of more features in a bound representation in WM does not require extra object-based attention.Entities:
Keywords: Binding; Object-based attention; Working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34046872 DOI: 10.3758/s13421-021-01183-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mem Cognit ISSN: 0090-502X