Large capacity temporary visual memory.
Ansgar D. Endress,Mary C. Potter +1 more
TL;DR: The results show that humans have a large-capacity temporary memory store in the absence of proactive interference, and raise the question of whether temporary memory in everyday cognitive processing is severely limited, as in WM experiments, or has the much larger capacity found in the present experiments.
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Abstract: Visual working memory (WM) capacity is thought to be limited to 3 or 4 items. However, many cognitive activities seem to require larger temporary memory stores. Here, we provide evidence for a temporary memory store with much larger capacity than past WM capacity estimates. Further, based on previous WM research, we show that a single factor--proactive interference--is sufficient to bring capacity estimates down to the range of previous WM capacity estimates. Participants saw a rapid serial visual presentation of 5-21 pictures of familiar objects or words presented at rates of 4/s or 8/s, respectively, and thus too fast for strategies such as rehearsal. Recognition memory was tested with a single probe item. When new items were used on all trials, no fixed memory capacities were observed, with estimates of up to 9.1 retained pictures for 21-item lists, and up to 30.0 retained pictures for 100-item lists, and no clear upper bound to how many items could be retained. Further, memory items were not stored in a temporally stable form of memory but decayed almost completely after a few minutes. In contrast, when, as in most WM experiments, a small set of items was reused across all trials, thus creating proactive interference among items, capacity remained in the range reported in previous WM experiments. These results show that humans have a large-capacity temporary memory store in the absence of proactive interference, and raise the question of whether temporary memory in everyday cognitive processing is severely limited, as in WM experiments, or has the much larger capacity found in the present experiments.
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Benchmarks for models of short-term and working memory.
Klaus Oberauer,Stephan Lewandowsky,Edward Awh,Gordon D. A. Brown,Andrew R. A. Conway,Nelson Cowan,Chris Donkin,Simon Farrell,Graham J. Hitch,Mark J. Hurlstone,Wei Ji Ma,Candice C. Morey,Derek Evan Nee,Judith Schweppe,Evie Vergauwe,Geoff Ward +15 more
TL;DR: A set of benchmarks for theories and computational models of short-term and working memory are proposed, described in as theory-neutral a way as possible, so that they can serve as empirical common ground for competing theoretical approaches.
Working memory is not fixed-capacity: More active storage capacity for real-world objects than for simple stimuli.
TL;DR: This work uses EEG to show that, contrary to existing theories, enhanced performance with real-world objects relative to simple stimuli in short-term memory tasks is reflected in active storage in working memory and is not entirely due to the independent usage of episodic long- term memory systems.
240
Short-term memory based on activated long-term memory: A review in response to Norris (2017).
TL;DR: Evidence is summarized for premises of Norris' case for a prominent class of theories in which STM depends on the brain keeping a separate copy of new information and an updated version of an alternative theory in which storage depends on aLTM, and, embedded within it, information enhanced by the current focus of attention, with no need for a separate STM copy.
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Evidence for Two Attentional Components in Visual Working Memory
TL;DR: Findings indicate an important role for executive processes in maintaining representations of earlier encountered stimuli in an active form alongside privileged storage of the most recent stimulus.
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