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VisualEyes: A Modular Software System for Oculomotor Experimentation
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Location and binding in visual working memory.

Anne Treisman1, Weiwei Zhang

  • 1Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA. treisman@princeton.edu

Memory & Cognition
|May 11, 2007
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Visual working memory (VWM) research shows that object features are remembered well even when locations change. However, the binding of features to objects is vulnerable to location changes, impacting memory retrieval.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Visual Perception

Background:

  • Visual working memory (VWM) is crucial for temporarily storing and manipulating visual information.
  • Understanding how features and their bindings are represented and maintained in VWM is a key research question.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the separate roles of object features and their binding in VWM.
  • To examine the influence of location changes on feature and binding recall in VWM.

Main Methods:

  • Participants performed recognition tasks involving visual stimuli with varying feature-binding and location conditions.
  • Behavioral data on feature and binding recognition accuracy were analyzed.

Main Results:

  • Object features were recognized with high accuracy, even when their locations changed.
  • The binding of features to objects was significantly impaired by changes in object location.
  • Strong interactions between location, binding, and feature matching suggest spontaneous integration in VWM.

Conclusions:

  • Location plays a critical role in the maintenance and retrieval of bound object representations in VWM.
  • Features can be accessed independently of location, potentially via separate feature maps.
  • The findings challenge previous notions of complete separation between object identity and location in VWM.