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The aftermath of memory retrieval for recycling visual working memory representations

Authors
Park, Hyung-BumZhang, WeiweiHyun, Joo-Seok
Issue Date
Jul-2017
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Visual working memory; Consecutive-change detection; Memory retrieval; Visual change; Recognition-induced
Citation
ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, v.79, no.5, pp 1393 - 1407
Pages
15
Journal Title
ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS
Volume
79
Number
5
Start Page
1393
End Page
1407
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/4267
DOI
10.3758/s13414-017-1314-9
ISSN
1943-3921
1943-393X
Abstract
We examined the aftermath of accessing and retrieving a subset of information stored in visual working memory (VWM)-namely, whether detection of a mismatch between memory and perception can impair the original memory of an item while triggering recognition-induced forgetting for the remaining, untested items. For this purpose, we devised a consecutive-change detection task wherein two successive testing probes were displayed after a single set of memory items. Across two experiments utilizing different memory-testing methods (whole vs. single probe), we observed a reliable pattern of poor performance in change detection for the second test when the first test had exhibited a color change. The impairment after a color change was evident even when the same memory item was repeatedly probed; this suggests that an attention-driven, salient visual change made it difficult to reinstate the previously remembered item. The second change detection, for memory items untested during the first change detection, was also found to be inaccurate, indicating that recognition-induced forgetting had occurred for the unprobed items in VWM. In a third experiment, we conducted a task that involved change detection plus continuous recall, wherein a memory recall task was presented after the change detection task. The analyses of the distributions of recall errors with a probabilistic mixture model revealed that the memory impairments from both visual changes and recognition-induced forgetting are explained better by the stochastic loss of memory items than by their degraded resolution. These results indicate that attention-driven visual change and recognition-induced forgetting jointly influence the "recycling" of VWM representations.
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