Holding the product of visual working memory integration: The role of attention.

Psychon Bull Rev

Department of Psychology and Behavioral Science, Zhejiang University, Yuhangtang Rd, 866, Hangzhou, 310058, P.R. China.

Published: April 2025


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The involuntary integration of discrete fragments into meaningful units (e.g., Gestalt) within visual working memory (VWM) is a crucial process in mind. However, the mechanisms governing the maintenance of these integrated products within VWM have remained largely unexplored. The current study sought to address this gap by investigating whether maintaining such VWM integration products places a greater demand on attention resources compared to discrete representations. We hypothesized that maintenance may be costless or require additional attention, which may be domain-specific or domain-general. To examine these hypotheses, we tested whether the emerged Gestalts by VWM integration can be abolished by an attention consumption task. Participants were required to memorize a sequence of oriented disks with or without Gestalt cues, alongside a secondary task during maintenance, consuming a specific type of attention. We found that a task consuming spatial attention impaired the VWM Gestalts of bar contours (Experiments 1 and 3), but not the Gestalts of square contours (Experiment 2). Moreover, a task consuming domain-general attention did not affect the VWM Gestalts of bar contours (Experiment 4). These findings provide evidence suggesting that maintaining VWM integration products requires more attention than discrete representations and that the type of attention required is domain-specific.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-024-02582-5DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

vwm integration
12
attention
9
visual working
8
working memory
8
maintaining vwm
8
integration products
8
discrete representations
8
type attention
8
task consuming
8
vwm gestalts
8

Similar Publications

Background: Vanishing White matter (VWM) is one of the more prevalent leukodystrophies, caused by biallelic pathogenic variants in any of the EIF2B1-5 genes. It is characterized by chronic progressive neurological deterioration and additional stress-provoked episodes of rapid decline, leading to severe neurological impairment and early death. The impact of VWM on unaffected family members has not been investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Limited capacity for the visual working memory-driven access to visual awareness.

J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform

July 2025

Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Zhejiang University.

Previous studies have shown that sensory information matching the content of visual working memory (VWM) gains prioritized access into awareness. While these studies primarily focused on a single stimulus, it remains unclear whether the prioritization persists when multiple items are memorized. Using a breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm, the current study systematically investigated the time taken to detect a suppressed stimulus when two items were maintained in VWM.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

. The flexibility of cognitive resource allocation is deteriorated due to aging and neurological degenerative diseases, such as Parkinson's disease (PD). Dual task performance reflects a subject's ability to allocate cognitive resources, and the investigation of cortical activation changes during dual tasking can provide a deep insight into the reallocation of neural resources.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Integrating prior semantic knowledge with environmental information is essential for everyday cognition, yet how this process affects ongoing perception and memory remains a vexing problem. We investigate this by studying how associative semantic knowledge interacts with perceptual constraints induced by brief encoding times, thereby supporting visual working memory (VWM) for real-world objects. Study 1 reanalyzed data from Quirk et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Visual working memory (VWM) is critical for temporarily storing and manipulating visual information but is limited in capacity. Previous research suggests that perceptual organization, such as grouping identical objects, may alleviate VWM resource constraints, yet the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study investigated whether identical orientation stimuli reduce VWM resource consumption and whether this reduction occurs during encoding or maintenance phase.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF