Spatial working memory for locations specified by vision and audition: Testing the amodality hypothesis
Identifieur interne : 002001 ( Ncbi/Merge ); précédent : 002000; suivant : 002002Spatial working memory for locations specified by vision and audition: Testing the amodality hypothesis
Auteurs : Jack M. Loomis [États-Unis] ; Roberta L. Klatzky [États-Unis] ; Brendan Mchugh [États-Unis] ; Nicholas A. Giudice [États-Unis]Source :
- Attention, perception & psychophysics [ 1943-3921 ] ; 2012.
Abstract
Spatial working memory can maintain representations from vision, hearing, and touch, representations referred to here as
Url:
DOI: 10.3758/s13414-012-0311-2
PubMed: 22552825
PubMed Central: 3482114
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PMC:3482114Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en"><p id="P1">Spatial working memory can maintain representations from vision, hearing, and touch, representations referred to here as <italic>spatial images</italic>
. The present experiment addressed whether spatial images from vision and hearing that are simultaneously present within working memory retain modality-specific tags or are amodal. Observers were presented with short sequences of targets varying in angular direction, with the targets in a given sequence being all auditory, all visual, or a sequential mixture of the two. On two thirds of the trials, one of the locations was repeated, and observers had to respond as quickly as possible when detecting this repetition. Ancillary detection and localization tasks confirmed that the visual and auditory targets were perceptually comparable. Response latencies in the working memory task showed small but reliable costs in performance on trials involving a sequential mixture of auditory and visual targets, as compared with trials of pure vision or pure audition. These deficits were statistically reliable only for trials on which the modalities of the matching location switched from the penultimate to the final target in the sequence, indicating a switching cost. The switching cost for the pair in immediate succession means that the spatial images representing the target locations retain features of the visual or auditory representations from which they were derived. However, there was no reliable evidence of a performance cost for mixed modalities in the matching pair when the second of the two did not immediately follow the first, suggesting that more enduring spatial images in working memory may be amodal.</p>
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<title-group><article-title>Spatial working memory for locations specified by vision and audition: Testing the amodality hypothesis</article-title>
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<aff id="A1"><label>1</label>
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106</aff>
<aff id="A2"><label>2</label>
Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213</aff>
<aff id="A3"><label>3</label>
Spatial Informatics Program, School of Computing and Information Science, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="nihms-submitted"><day>30</day>
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<year>2012</year>
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<pub-date pub-type="pmc-release"><day>01</day>
<month>8</month>
<year>2013</year>
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<volume>74</volume>
<issue>6</issue>
<fpage>1260</fpage>
<lpage>1267</lpage>
<abstract><p id="P1">Spatial working memory can maintain representations from vision, hearing, and touch, representations referred to here as <italic>spatial images</italic>
. The present experiment addressed whether spatial images from vision and hearing that are simultaneously present within working memory retain modality-specific tags or are amodal. Observers were presented with short sequences of targets varying in angular direction, with the targets in a given sequence being all auditory, all visual, or a sequential mixture of the two. On two thirds of the trials, one of the locations was repeated, and observers had to respond as quickly as possible when detecting this repetition. Ancillary detection and localization tasks confirmed that the visual and auditory targets were perceptually comparable. Response latencies in the working memory task showed small but reliable costs in performance on trials involving a sequential mixture of auditory and visual targets, as compared with trials of pure vision or pure audition. These deficits were statistically reliable only for trials on which the modalities of the matching location switched from the penultimate to the final target in the sequence, indicating a switching cost. The switching cost for the pair in immediate succession means that the spatial images representing the target locations retain features of the visual or auditory representations from which they were derived. However, there was no reliable evidence of a performance cost for mixed modalities in the matching pair when the second of the two did not immediately follow the first, suggesting that more enduring spatial images in working memory may be amodal.</p>
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