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1.
J Neurosci ; 39(6): 1100-1108, 2019 02 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30541914

RESUMEN

How people process images is known to affect memory for those images, but these effects have typically been studied using explicit task instructions to vary encoding. Here, we investigate the effects of intrinsic variation in processing on subsequent memory, testing whether recognizing an ambiguous stimulus as meaningful (as a face vs as shape blobs) predicts subsequent visual memory even when matching the perceptual features and the encoding strategy between subsequently remembered and subsequently forgotten items. We show in adult humans of either sex that single trial EEG activity can predict whether participants will subsequently remember an ambiguous Mooney face image (e.g., an image that will sometimes be seen as a face and sometimes not be seen as a face). In addition, we show that a classifier trained only to discriminate between whether participants perceive a face versus non-face can generalize to predict whether an ambiguous image is subsequently remembered. Furthermore, when we examine the N170, an event-related potential index of face processing, we find that images that elicit larger N170s are more likely to be remembered than those that elicit smaller N170s, even when the exact same image elicited larger or smaller N170s across participants. Thus, images processed as meaningful, in this case as a face, during encoding are better remembered than identical images that are not processed as a face. This provides strong evidence that understanding the meaning of a stimulus during encoding plays a critical role in visual memory.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Is visual memory inherently visual or does meaning and other conceptual information necessarily play a role even in memory for detailed visual information? Here we show that it is easier to remember an image when it is processed in a meaningful way, as indexed by the amount of category-specific brain activity it elicits. In particular, we use single-trial EEG activity to predict whether an image will be subsequently remembered, and show that the main driver of this prediction ability is whether or not an image is seen as meaningful or non-meaningful. This shows that the extent to which an image is processed as meaningful can be used to predict subsequent memory even when controlling for perceptual factors and encoding strategies that typically differ across images.


Asunto(s)
Reconocimiento Facial/fisiología , Memoria/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Aprendizaje Discriminativo/fisiología , Electroencefalografía , Potenciales Evocados/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Estimulación Luminosa , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología , Reconocimiento en Psicología
2.
J Vis ; 20(8): 24, 2020 08 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32841317

RESUMEN

Attentional tracking and working memory tasks are often performed better when targets are divided evenly between the left and right visual hemifields, rather than contained within a single hemifield (Alvarez & Cavanagh, 2005; Delvenne, 2005). However, this bilateral field advantage does not provide conclusive evidence of hemifield-specific control of attention and working memory, because it can be explained solely from hemifield-limited spatial interference at early stages of visual processing. If control of attention and working memory is specific to each hemifield, maintaining target information should become more difficult as targets move between the two hemifields. Observers in the present study maintained targets that moved either within or between the left and right hemifields, using either attention (Experiment 1) or working memory (Experiment 2). Maintaining spatial information was more difficult when target items moved between the hemifields compared with when target items moved within their original hemifields, consistent with hemifield-specific control of spatial attention and working memory. However, this pattern was not found for maintaining identity information (e.g., color) in working memory (Experiment 3). Together, these results provide evidence that control of spatial attention and working memory is specific to each hemifield, and that hemifield-specific control is a unique signature of spatial processing.


Asunto(s)
Memoria a Corto Plazo/fisiología , Procesamiento Espacial/fisiología , Campos Visuales/fisiología , Atención , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Percepción Visual , Adulto Joven
3.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 31(7): 937-947, 2019 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30912729

RESUMEN

Feature-based attention is known to enhance visual processing globally across the visual field, even at task-irrelevant locations. Here, we asked whether attention to object categories, in particular faces, shows similar location-independent tuning. Using EEG, we measured the face-selective N170 component of the EEG signal to examine neural responses to faces at task-irrelevant locations while participants attended to faces at another task-relevant location. Across two experiments, we found that visual processing of faces was amplified at task-irrelevant locations when participants attended to faces relative to when participants attended to either buildings or scrambled face parts. The fact that we see this enhancement with the N170 suggests that these attentional effects occur at the earliest stage of face processing. Two additional behavioral experiments showed that it is easier to attend to the same object category across the visual field relative to two distinct categories, consistent with object-based attention spreading globally. Together, these results suggest that attention to high-level object categories shows similar spatially global effects on visual processing as attention to simple, individual, low-level features.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Encéfalo/fisiología , Reconocimiento Facial/fisiología , Procesamiento Espacial/fisiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Electroencefalografía , Potenciales Evocados , Humanos , Campos Visuales , Adulto Joven
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(27): 7459-64, 2016 07 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27325767

RESUMEN

Visual working memory is the cognitive system that holds visual information active to make it resistant to interference from new perceptual input. Information about simple stimuli-colors and orientations-is encoded into working memory rapidly: In under 100 ms, working memory ?fills up," revealing a stark capacity limit. However, for real-world objects, the same behavioral limits do not hold: With increasing encoding time, people store more real-world objects and do so with more detail. This boost in performance for real-world objects is generally assumed to reflect the use of a separate episodic long-term memory system, rather than working memory. Here we show that this behavioral increase in capacity with real-world objects is not solely due to the use of separate episodic long-term memory systems. In particular, we show that this increase is a result of active storage in working memory, as shown by directly measuring neural activity during the delay period of a working memory task using EEG. These data challenge fixed-capacity working memory models and demonstrate that working memory and its capacity limitations are dependent upon our existing knowledge.


Asunto(s)
Memoria a Corto Plazo , Adolescente , Adulto , Color , Electroencefalografía , Humanos , Factores de Tiempo , Adulto Joven
5.
J Neurophysiol ; 117(1): 388-402, 2017 01 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27832600

RESUMEN

Visual search is a ubiquitous visual behavior, and efficient search is essential for survival. Different cognitive models have explained the speed and accuracy of search based either on the dynamics of attention or on similarity of item representations. Here, we examined the extent to which performance on a visual search task can be predicted from the stable representational architecture of the visual system, independent of attentional dynamics. Participants performed a visual search task with 28 conditions reflecting different pairs of categories (e.g., searching for a face among cars, body among hammers, etc.). The time it took participants to find the target item varied as a function of category combination. In a separate group of participants, we measured the neural responses to these object categories when items were presented in isolation. Using representational similarity analysis, we then examined whether the similarity of neural responses across different subdivisions of the visual system had the requisite structure needed to predict visual search performance. Overall, we found strong brain/behavior correlations across most of the higher-level visual system, including both the ventral and dorsal pathways when considering both macroscale sectors as well as smaller mesoscale regions. These results suggest that visual search for real-world object categories is well predicted by the stable, task-independent architecture of the visual system. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: Here, we ask which neural regions have neural response patterns that correlate with behavioral performance in a visual processing task. We found that the representational structure across all of high-level visual cortex has the requisite structure to predict behavior. Furthermore, when directly comparing different neural regions, we found that they all had highly similar category-level representational structures. These results point to a ubiquitous and uniform representational structure in high-level visual cortex underlying visual object processing.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Mapeo Encefálico , Vías Nerviosas/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Modelos Lineales , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Masculino , Red Nerviosa/fisiología , Vías Nerviosas/diagnóstico por imagen , Oxígeno/sangre , Estimulación Luminosa , Tiempo de Reacción , Corteza Visual/diagnóstico por imagen , Adulto Joven
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(24): 8955-60, 2014 Jun 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24889618

RESUMEN

High-level visual categories (e.g., faces, bodies, scenes, and objects) have separable neural representations across the visual cortex. Here, we show that this division of neural resources affects the ability to simultaneously process multiple items. In a behavioral task, we found that performance was superior when items were drawn from different categories (e.g., two faces/two scenes) compared to when items were drawn from one category (e.g., four faces). The magnitude of this mixed-category benefit depended on which stimulus categories were paired together (e.g., faces and scenes showed a greater behavioral benefit than objects and scenes). Using functional neuroimaging (i.e., functional MRI), we showed that the size of the mixed-category benefit was predicted by the amount of separation between neural response patterns, particularly within occipitotemporal cortex. These results suggest that the ability to process multiple items at once is limited by the extent to which those items are represented by separate neural populations.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas/fisiología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Conducta , Mapeo Encefálico/métodos , Corteza Cerebral/fisiología , Cognición , Cara , Humanos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Memoria a Corto Plazo , Modelos Biológicos , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Lóbulo Temporal/fisiología
7.
J Vis ; 17(4): 4, 2017 04 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28388699

RESUMEN

Cognitive training has become a billion-dollar industry with the promise that exercising a cognitive faculty (e.g., attention) on simple "brain games" will lead to improvements on any task relying on the same faculty. Although this logic seems sound, it assumes performance improves on training tasks because attention's capacity has been enhanced. Alternatively, training may result in attentional expertise-an enhancement of the ability to deploy attention to particular content-such that improvement on training tasks is specific to the features of the training context. The present study supported this attentional expertise hypothesis, showing that training benefits did not generalize fully from a trained attentional tracking task to untrained tracking tasks requiring a common attentional capacity, but differing in seemingly superficial features (i.e., retinotopic location and or motion type). This specificity suggests that attentional training benefits are linked to enhanced coordination between attentional processes and content-specific perceptual representations. Thus, these results indicate that shared attentional capacity between tasks is insufficient for producing generalized training benefits, and predict that generalization requires attentional expertise for content present in both training and outcome tasks.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Cognición/fisiología , Aprendizaje Discriminativo/fisiología , Percepción de Movimiento/fisiología , Adulto , Femenino , Fijación Ocular/fisiología , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Joven
8.
J Vis ; 17(6): 20, 2017 06 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28654965

RESUMEN

While substantial work has focused on how the visual system achieves basic-level recognition, less work has asked about how it supports large-scale distinctions between objects, such as animacy and real-world size. Previous work has shown that these dimensions are reflected in our neural object representations (Konkle & Caramazza, 2013), and that objects of different real-world sizes have different mid-level perceptual features (Long, Konkle, Cohen, & Alvarez, 2016). Here, we test the hypothesis that animates and manmade objects also differ in mid-level perceptual features. To do so, we generated synthetic images of animals and objects that preserve some texture and form information ("texforms"), but are not identifiable at the basic level. We used visual search efficiency as an index of perceptual similarity, as search is slower when targets are perceptually similar to distractors. Across three experiments, we find that observers can find animals faster among objects than among other animals, and vice versa, and that these results hold when stimuli are reduced to unrecognizable texforms. Electrophysiological evidence revealed that this mixed-animacy search advantage emerges during early stages of target individuation, and not during later stages associated with semantic processing. Lastly, we find that perceived curvature explains part of the mixed-animacy search advantage and that observers use perceived curvature to classify texforms as animate/inanimate. Taken together, these findings suggest that mid-level perceptual features, including curvature, contain cues to whether an object may be animate versus manmade. We propose that the visual system capitalizes on these early cues to facilitate object detection, recognition, and classification.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Señales (Psicología) , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Humanos , Memoria a Corto Plazo/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Adulto Joven
9.
Psychol Sci ; 27(4): 563-71, 2016 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26966228

RESUMEN

Can attention alter the impression of a face? Previous studies showed that attention modulates the appearance of lower-level visual features. For instance, attention can make a simple stimulus appear to have higher contrast than it actually does. We tested whether attention can also alter the perception of a higher-order property-namely, facial attractiveness. We asked participants to judge the relative attractiveness of two faces after summoning their attention to one of the faces using a briefly presented visual cue. Across trials, participants judged the attended face to be more attractive than the same face when it was unattended. This effect was not due to decision or response biases, but rather was due to changes in perceptual processing of the faces. These results show that attention alters perceived facial attractiveness, and broadly demonstrate that attention can influence higher-level perception and may affect people's initial impressions of one another.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Belleza , Reconocimiento Facial , Percepción Visual , Adolescente , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Joven
10.
J Neurosci ; 34(35): 11526-33, 2014 Aug 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25164651

RESUMEN

It is much easier to divide attention across the left and right visual hemifields than within the same visual hemifield. Here we investigate whether this benefit of dividing attention across separate visual fields is evident at early cortical processing stages. We measured the steady-state visual evoked potential, an oscillatory response of the visual cortex elicited by flickering stimuli, of moving targets and distractors while human observers performed a tracking task. The amplitude of responses at the target frequencies was larger than that of the distractor frequencies when participants tracked two targets in separate hemifields, indicating that attention can modulate early visual processing when it is divided across hemifields. However, these attentional modulations disappeared when both targets were tracked within the same hemifield. These effects were not due to differences in task performance, because accuracy was matched across the tracking conditions by adjusting target speed (with control conditions ruling out effects due to speed alone). To investigate later processing stages, we examined the P3 component over central-parietal scalp sites that was elicited by the test probe at the end of the trial. The P3 amplitude was larger for probes on targets than on distractors, regardless of whether attention was divided across or within a hemifield, indicating that these higher-level processes were not constrained by visual hemifield. These results suggest that modulating early processing stages enables more efficient target tracking, and that within-hemifield competition limits the ability to modulate multiple target representations within the hemifield maps of the early visual cortex.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Percepción de Movimiento/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Electroencefalografía , Potenciales Evocados Visuales/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Joven
11.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 27(11): 2240-52, 2015 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26226078

RESUMEN

Visual perception and awareness have strict limitations. We suggest that one source of these limitations is the representational architecture of the visual system. Under this view, the extent to which items activate the same neural channels constrains the amount of information that can be processed by the visual system and ultimately reach awareness. Here, we measured how well stimuli from different categories (e.g., faces and cars) blocked one another from reaching awareness using two distinct paradigms that render stimuli invisible: visual masking and continuous flash suppression. Next, we used fMRI to measure the similarity of the neural responses elicited by these categories across the entire visual hierarchy. Overall, we found strong brain-behavior correlations within the ventral pathway, weaker correlations in the dorsal pathway, and no correlations in early visual cortex (V1-V3). These results suggest that the organization of higher level visual cortex constrains visual awareness and the overall processing capacity of visual cognition.


Asunto(s)
Concienciación/fisiología , Mapeo Encefálico , Encéfalo/fisiología , Vías Visuales/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Encéfalo/irrigación sanguínea , Femenino , Lateralidad Funcional , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Masculino , Oxígeno/sangre , Enmascaramiento Perceptual , Estimulación Luminosa , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estadística como Asunto , Vías Visuales/irrigación sanguínea
12.
J Vis ; 15(15): 6, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26575192

RESUMEN

Influential slot and resource models of visual working memory make the assumption that items are stored in memory as independent units, and that there are no interactions between them. Consequently, these models predict that the number of items to be remembered (the set size) is the primary determinant of working memory performance, and therefore these models quantify memory capacity in terms of the number and quality of individual items that can be stored. Here we demonstrate that there is substantial variance in display difficulty within a single set size, suggesting that limits based on the number of individual items alone cannot explain working memory storage. We asked hundreds of participants to remember the same sets of displays, and discovered that participants were highly consistent in terms of which items and displays were hardest or easiest to remember. Although a simple grouping or chunking strategy could not explain this individual-display variability, a model with multiple, interacting levels of representation could explain some of the display-by-display differences. Specifically, a model that includes a hierarchical representation of items plus the mean and variance of sets of the colors on the display successfully accounts for some of the variability across displays. We conclude that working memory representations are composed only in part of individual, independent object representations, and that a major factor in how many items are remembered on a particular display is interitem representations such as perceptual grouping, ensemble, and texture representations.


Asunto(s)
Percepción de Color/fisiología , Memoria a Corto Plazo/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Adulto , Humanos , Masculino , Modelos Teóricos , Adulto Joven
13.
J Vis ; 15(11): 1, 2015 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26237297

RESUMEN

Much is known about visual search for single targets, but relatively little about how participants "forage" for multiple targets. One important question is how long participants will search before moving to a new display. Evidence suggests that participants should leave when intake drops below the average rate ("optimal foraging," Charnov, 1976). However, the real world has temporal structure (e.g., seasons) that could influence behavior. Does it matter if winter is coming and the next display will be worse than the last? We gave participants a series of search displays and asked them to collect targets as fast as possible. Target density was structured-rising and falling systematically across trials. We measured the duration for which participants foraged in each display (trials were terminated by participants). Foraging behavior was affected by temporal structure-counter to a simple optimal foraging account, observers searched displays longer when quality was falling compared to rising (Experiments 1 and 2). Additionally, we found that temporal structure altered explicit predictions about display quality (Experiment 2). These results demonstrate that foraging theories need to consider richer models of observers' representations of the world.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Ambiente , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Análisis y Desempeño de Tareas , Adolescente , Adulto , Humanos , Adulto Joven
14.
Psychol Sci ; 24(6): 981-90, 2013 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23630219

RESUMEN

Visual long-term memory can store thousands of objects with surprising visual detail, but just how detailed are these representations, and how can one quantify this fidelity? Using the property of color as a case study, we estimated the precision of visual information in long-term memory, and compared this with the precision of the same information in working memory. Observers were shown real-world objects in random colors and were asked to recall the colors after a delay. We quantified two parameters of performance: the variability of internal representations of color (fidelity) and the probability of forgetting an object's color altogether. Surprisingly, the fidelity of color information in long-term memory was comparable to the asymptotic precision of working memory. These results suggest that long-term memory and working memory may be constrained by a common limit, such as a bound on the fidelity required to retrieve a memory representation.


Asunto(s)
Memoria a Largo Plazo/fisiología , Memoria a Corto Plazo/fisiología , Recuerdo Mental/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Percepción de Color/fisiología , Humanos , Adulto Joven
15.
J Vis ; 13(10)2013 Aug 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23962734

RESUMEN

The MemToolbox is a collection of MATLAB functions for modeling visual working memory. In support of its goal to provide a full suite of data analysis tools, the toolbox includes implementations of popular models of visual working memory, real and simulated data sets, Bayesian and maximum likelihood estimation procedures for fitting models to data, visualizations of data and fit, validation routines, model comparison metrics, and experiment scripts. The MemToolbox is released under the permissive BSD license and is available at http://memtoolbox.org.


Asunto(s)
Memoria a Corto Plazo/fisiología , Modelos Teóricos , Neuronas/fisiología , Procesamiento de Señales Asistido por Computador/instrumentación , Programas Informáticos , Estadística como Asunto/métodos , Animales , Teorema de Bayes , Humanos , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Factores de Tiempo
16.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(18): 7345-50, 2009 May 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19380739

RESUMEN

There is a great deal of structural regularity in the natural environment, and such regularities confer an opportunity to form compressed, efficient representations. Although this concept has been extensively studied within the domain of low-level sensory coding, there has been limited focus on efficient coding in the field of visual attention. Here we show that spatial patterns of orientation information ("spatial ensemble statistics") can be efficiently encoded under conditions of reduced attention. In our task, observers monitored for changes to the spatial pattern of background elements while they were attentively tracking moving objects in the foreground. By using stimuli that enable us to dissociate changes in local structure from changes in the ensemble structure, we found that observers were more sensitive to changes to the background that altered the ensemble structure than to changes that did not alter the ensemble structure. We propose that reducing attention to the background increases the amount of noise in local feature representations, but that spatial ensemble statistics capitalize on structural regularities to overcome this noise by pooling across local measurements, gaining precision in the representation of the ensemble.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Percepción Espacial/fisiología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Humanos , Adulto Joven
17.
J Vis ; 12(5): 9, 2012 May 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22637710

RESUMEN

Previous studies have shown independent attentional selection of targets in the left and right visual hemifields during attentional tracking (Alvarez & Cavanagh, 2005) but not during a visual search (Luck, Hillyard, Mangun, & Gazzaniga, 1989). Here we tested whether multifocal spatial attention is the critical process that operates independently in the two hemifields. It is explicitly required in tracking (attend to a subset of object locations, suppress the others) but not in the standard visual search task (where all items are potential targets). We used a modified visual search task in which observers searched for a target within a subset of display items, where the subset was selected based on location (Experiments 1 and 3A) or based on a salient feature difference (Experiments 2 and 3B). The results show hemifield independence in this subset visual search task with location-based selection but not with feature-based selection; this effect cannot be explained by general difficulty (Experiment 4). Combined, these findings suggest that hemifield independence is a signature of multifocal spatial attention and highlight the need for cognitive and neural theories of attention to account for anatomical constraints on selection mechanisms.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Lateralidad Funcional/fisiología , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Campos Visuales/fisiología , Adulto Joven
18.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 491, 2022 01 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35078981

RESUMEN

Anterior regions of the ventral visual stream encode substantial information about object categories. Are top-down category-level forces critical for arriving at this representation, or can this representation be formed purely through domain-general learning of natural image structure? Here we present a fully self-supervised model which learns to represent individual images, rather than categories, such that views of the same image are embedded nearby in a low-dimensional feature space, distinctly from other recently encountered views. We find that category information implicitly emerges in the local similarity structure of this feature space. Further, these models learn hierarchical features which capture the structure of brain responses across the human ventral visual stream, on par with category-supervised models. These results provide computational support for a domain-general framework guiding the formation of visual representation, where the proximate goal is not explicitly about category information, but is instead to learn unique, compressed descriptions of the visual world.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/fisiología , Aprendizaje Profundo , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Vías Visuales/fisiología , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Mapeo Encefálico/métodos , Humanos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Corteza Visual/diagnóstico por imagen , Vías Visuales/diagnóstico por imagen
19.
Psychol Sci ; 22(3): 384-92, 2011 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21296808

RESUMEN

Influential models of visual working memory treat each item to be stored as an independent unit and assume that there are no interactions between items. However, real-world displays have structure that provides higher-order constraints on the items to be remembered. Even in the case of a display of simple colored circles, observers can compute statistics, such as mean circle size, to obtain an overall summary of the display. We examined the influence of such an ensemble statistic on visual working memory. We report evidence that the remembered size of each individual item in a display is biased toward the mean size of the set of items in the same color and the mean size of all items in the display. This suggests that visual working memory is constructive, encoding displays at multiple levels of abstraction and integrating across these levels, rather than maintaining a veridical representation of each item independently.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Percepción de Color , Generalización del Estimulo , Memoria a Corto Plazo , Modelos Estadísticos , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos , Percepción del Tamaño , Formación de Concepto , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Orientación , Retención en Psicología
20.
Psychol Sci ; 22(9): 1165-72, 2011 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21841149

RESUMEN

Is visual attention required for visual consciousness? In the past decade, many researchers have claimed that awareness can arise in the absence of attention. This claim is largely based on the notion that natural scene (or "gist") perception occurs without attention. This article presents evidence against this idea. We show that when observers perform a variety of demanding, sustained-attention tasks, inattentional blindness occurs for natural scenes. In addition, scene perception is impaired under dual-task conditions, but only when the primary task is sufficiently demanding. This finding suggests that previous studies that have been interpreted as demonstrating scene perception without attention failed to fully engage attention and that natural-scene perception does indeed require attention. Thus, natural-scene perception is not a preattentive process and cannot be used to support the idea of awareness without attention.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Percepción Visual , Adolescente , Adulto , Concienciación , Estado de Conciencia , Humanos , Estimulación Luminosa , Adulto Joven
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