Improvements to visual working memory performance with practice and feedback.

PLoS One

Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.

Published: February 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Visual working memory generally holds about 3-4 items, but individuals often don’t accurately recall even one item, showing a lack of self-awareness about these errors.
  • Previous research highlighted that feedback can temporarily enhance working memory, but its effects fade quickly once it's removed.
  • In this study, participants either practiced working memory with or without feedback, engaged in crossword puzzles, or had no contact, revealing that simple practice improves performance, while feedback provided only limited and non-persistent benefits.

Article Abstract

Visual working memory capacity is estimated to be around 3-4 items, but on some trials participants fail to correctly report even a single item from the memory array. Such failures of working memory performance are surprisingly common, and participants have poor self-awareness of them. Previous work has shown that behavioral feedback can reduce the frequency of working memory failures, but the benefits of feedback disappeared immediately after it was taken away. Here, we tested whether extended practice with or without trial-by-trial feedback would lead to persistent improvements in working memory performance. Participants were assigned to one of four groups: (1) Working memory practice with feedback (2) Working memory practice without feedback (3) Crossword puzzle active control (4) No-contact control. Consistent with previous work, simple practice with a visual working memory task robustly improved working memory performance across practice sessions. However, we found only partial support for the efficacy of feedback in improving working memory performance. Practicing with feedback improved working memory performance relative to a no-feedback group for some practice sessions. However, the feedback benefits did not persist across all training sessions and did not transfer to a final test session without the feedback. Thus, the benefits of performance feedback did not persist over time. Further, we found only stimulus-specific transfer of visual working memory practice benefits. We also found that participants' metaknowledge improved with practice, but that receiving feedback about task accuracy actually slightly harmed the accuracy of concurrent metaknowledge ratings. Finally, we discuss important design considerations for future work in this area (e.g. power, expectations, and "spacing effects"). For example, we found that achieved statistical power to detect a between-groups effect declined with practice. This finding has potentially critical implications for any study using a 1-session study to calculate power for a planned multi-session study.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6117037PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0203279PLOS

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