Active versus passive maintenance of visual nonverbal memory.

Psychon Bull Rev

Institute of Psychological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK,

Published: August 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The "recent-negative-probe" procedure allows researchers to study short-term forgetting by analyzing how previous, often ignored memories affect current memory tasks.
  • In an experiment involving visual memory for abstract shapes, participants experienced proactive interference, where they took longer to reject a nonmatching probe that matched a previous trial's target.
  • The findings support the active-passive memory model, showing that while actively maintained memories decay, unattended memories from prior trials can still influence performance without being actively held in mind.

Article Abstract

Forgetting over the short term has challenged researchers for more than a century, largely because of the difficulty of controlling what goes on within the memory retention interval. But the "recent-negative-probe" procedure offers a valuable paradigm, by examining the influences of (presumably) unattended memoranda from prior trials. Here we used a recent-probe task to investigate forgetting for visual nonverbal short-term memory. The target stimuli (two visually presented abstract shapes) on a trial were followed after a retention interval by a probe, and participants indicated whether the probe matched one of the target items. Proactive interference, and hence memory for old trial probes, was observed, whereby participants were slowed in rejecting a nonmatching probe on the current trial that nevertheless matched a target item on the previous trial (a recent-negative probe). The attraction of the paradigm is that, by uncovering proactive influences of past-trial probe stimuli, it can be argued that active maintenance in memory of those probes is unlikely. In two experiments, we recorded such proactive interference of prior-trial items over a range of interstimulus (ISI) and intertrial (ITI) intervals (between 1 and 6 s, respectively). Consistent with a proposed two-process memory conception (the active-passive memory model, or APM), actively maintained memories on current trials decayed, but passively "maintained," or unattended, visual memories of stimuli on past trials did not.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-013-0574-1DOI Listing

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