Authors
Dirk van Moorselaar, Jan Theeuwes, Christian NL Olivers
Publication date
2016/10
Journal
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
Volume
23
Pages
1483-1490
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Objects in visual working memory (VWM) that are only prospectively relevant can nevertheless affect the guidance of attention in an ongoing visual search task. Here we investigated whether learning changes the attentional status of such prospective memories. Observers performed a visual search while holding an item in memory for a later memory test. This prospective memory was then repeated for several trials. When the memory was new, it interfered with the ongoing search task. However, with repetition, memory performance increased but memory-based interference rapidly diminished, suggesting that observers learned to shield the prospective memory from the ongoing task. This contrasts with earlier findings showing stronger attentional biases from learned memories when these are immediately task-relevant. Interestingly, interference resurfaced again in anticipation of a new memory, suggesting …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D van Moorselaar, J Theeuwes, CNL Olivers - Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2016