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Title

Out with the old? The role of selective attention in retaining targets in partial report.

Authors

Lindsey, Dakota; Bundesen, Claus; Kyllingsbæk, Søren; Petersen, Anders; Logan, Gordon

Abstract

In the partial-report task, subjects are asked to report only a portion of the items presented. Selective attention chooses which objects to represent in short-term memory (STM) on the basis of their relevance. Because STM is limited in capacity, one must sometimes choose which objects are removed from memory in light of new relevant information. We tested the hypothesis that the choices among newly presented information and old information in STM involve the same process-that both are acts of selective attention. We tested this hypothesis using a two-display partial-report procedure. In this procedure, subjects had to select and retain relevant letters (targets) from two sequentially presented displays. If selection in perception and retention in STM are the same process, then irrelevant letters (distractors) in the second display, which demanded attention because of their similarity to the targets, should have decreased target report from the first display. This effect was not obtained in any of four experiments. Thus, choosing objects to keep in STM is not the same process as choosing new objects to bring into STM.

Subjects

SHORT-term memory; SELECTIVITY (Psychology); SENSORY perception; PSYCHOLOGICAL research; COMPARATIVE studies

Publication

Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, 2017, Vol 79, Issue 1, p117

ISSN

1943-3921

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3758/s13414-016-1214-4

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