Stimulus familiarity improves consolidation of visual working memory representations

被引:0
|
作者
Lisa Durrance Blalock
机构
[1] University of West Florida,Department of Psychology
来源
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics | 2015年 / 77卷
关键词
Visual working memory; Training; Short-term consolidation; Visual long-term memory; Encoding;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Short-term consolidation is a process that stabilizes visual working memory (VWM) representations so that they are less susceptible to interference. The current study examined this process, specifically if training on specific shapes facilitated the consolidation of visual representations in working memory. Three experiments using two different training tasks compared performance between trained and novel stimuli using the backward masking paradigm. Experiment 1 used a four alternative forced choice task and found an overall advantage for trained shapes as well as evidence for faster consolidation for trained shapes and this cannot be explained by verbal labeling of the trained items (Experiment 3). Experiment 2 used a change-detection training task and showed no overall benefit of training but did show evidence of transfer of training to novel shapes. Taken together, these results show that long-term visual representations can facilitate VWM processing, but the type of training task used impacts the degree to which the long-term representations will affect VWM.
引用
收藏
页码:1143 / 1158
页数:15
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