Dissociations of the number and precision of visual short-term memory representations in change detection

Mem Cognit. 2017 Nov;45(8):1423-1437. doi: 10.3758/s13421-017-0739-7.

Abstract

The present study dissociated the number (i.e., quantity) and precision (i.e., quality) of visual short-term memory (STM) representations in change detection using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) and experimental manipulations. Across three experiments, participants performed both recognition and recall tests of visual STM using the change-detection task and the continuous color-wheel recall task, respectively. Experiment 1 demonstrated that the estimates of the number and precision of visual STM representations based on the ROC model of change-detection performance were robustly correlated with the corresponding estimates based on the mixture model of continuous-recall performance. Experiments 2 and 3 showed that the experimental manipulation of mnemonic precision using white-noise masking and the experimental manipulation of the number of encoded STM representations using consolidation masking produced selective effects on the corresponding measures of mnemonic precision and the number of encoded STM representations, respectively, in both change-detection and continuous-recall tasks. Altogether, using the individual-differences (Experiment 1) and experimental dissociation (Experiment 2 and 3) approaches, the present study demonstrated the some-or-none nature of visual STM representations across recall and recognition.

Keywords: Capacity; Masking; Precision; ROC; Visual short-term memory.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Humans
  • Memory, Short-Term / physiology*
  • Mental Recall / physiology*
  • Perceptual Masking / physiology*
  • ROC Curve
  • Recognition, Psychology / physiology*
  • Visual Perception / physiology*