The capacity of visual short-term memory is set both by visual information load and by number of objects
Article Abstract:
Previous research has suggested that visual short-term memory has a fixed capacity of about four objects. However, we found that capacity varied substantially across the five stimulus classes we examined, ranging from 1.6 for shaded cubes to 4.4 for colors (estimated using a change detection task). We also estimated the information load per item in each class, using visual search rate. The changes we measured in memory capacity across classes were almost exactly mirrored by changes in the opposite direction in visual search rate (r2=.992 between search rate and the reciprocal of memory capacity).Thegreater the information load of each item in a stimulus class (as indicated by a slower search rate), the fewer items from that class one can hold in memory. Extrapolating this linear relationship reveals that there is also an upper bound on capacity of approximately four or five objects. Thus, both the visual information load and number of objects impose capacity limits on visual short-term memory.
Publication Name: Psychological Science
Subject: Psychology and mental health
ISSN: 0956-7976
Year: 2004
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Implicit memory in amnesic patients: impairment of voice-specific priming
Article Abstract:
A filter identification test for assessing auditory priming on 12 amnesic patients and 12 control subjects revealed the former's responses to same-voice and different-voice conditions to be similar. This suggests voice-specific priming to be correlated to impaired memory systems in amnesic patients.
Publication Name: Psychological Science
Subject: Psychology and mental health
ISSN: 0956-7976
Year: 1995
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