Volume 8, Number 16, Article 7, Pages 1-13 doi:10.1167/8.16.7 http://journalofvision.org/8/16/7/ ISSN 1534-7362
Object perception is selectively slowed by a visually similar working memory load
Alan Robinson
Department of Cognitive Science, University of California, San Diego, USA
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Alberto Manzi
Second University of Naples, Italy, & Cognitive Electrophysiology Laboratory, New York State Psychiatric Institute, USA
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Jochen Triesch
Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, Germany
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Abstract

The capacity of visual working memory has been extensively characterized, but little work has investigated how occupying visual memory influences other aspects of cognition and perception. Here we show a novel effect: maintaining an item in visual working memory slows processing of similar visual stimuli during the maintenance period. Subjects judged the gender of computer rendered faces or the naturalness of body postures while maintaining different visual memory loads. We found that when stimuli of the same class (faces or bodies) were maintained in memory, perceptual judgments were slowed. Interestingly, this is the opposite of what would be predicted from traditional priming. Our results suggest there is interference between visual working memory and perception, caused by visual similarity between new perceptual input and items already encoded in memory.

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History
Received January 31, 2008; published December 22, 2008
Citation
Robinson, A., Manzi, A., & Triesch, J. (2008). Object perception is selectively slowed by a visually similar working memory load. Journal of Vision, 8(16):7, 1-13, http://journalofvision.org/8/16/7/, doi:10.1167/8.16.7.
Keywords
visual working memory, perceptual judgements, object recognition, object classification, face processing, priming
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