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Binding spatial location and stimulus identity in short-term memory
Caprio, Marina; Godoy, Juliana Pardo Moura Campos; Galera, Cesar.
Affiliation
  • Caprio, Marina; Instituto de Ensino Superior COC. BR
  • Godoy, Juliana Pardo Moura Campos; Universidade de São Paulo. BR
  • Galera, Cesar; Universidade de São Paulo. BR
Psychol. neurosci. (Impr.) ; 3(1): 125-132, Jan.-June 2010. ilus
Article in En | LILACS | ID: lil-604511
Responsible library: BR85.1
ABSTRACT
In the working memory model, phonological and visuospatial information are stored by separate and independent systems. However, sometimes binding of visual and verbal information must occur. This study investigated whether these memory systems cooperate in the recall of spatial location of a stimulus defined by both types of information. Participants memorized the spatial locations in which name-and-face pairs were presented and either recalled the position of a test stimulus in which the two types of information were always present (Experiment 1) or recalled the position of a test stimulus that non-predictively contained either the visual or verbal information (Experiment 2). The results showed no cooperation between visuospatial and phonological systems when both types of information were present in the test stimulus. Rather, a clear preference for verbal information was found (Experiment 1). When the test stimulus contained only one type of information, recall based on both verbal and visual information was impaired (Experiment 2). These results suggest that visual and verbal information are not automatically integrated into memory and that storage capacity is smaller for integrated information than for isolated information.
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Full text: 1 Index: LILACS Main subject: Female / Male / Adult / Memory Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Psychol. neurosci. (Impr.) Journal subject: NEUROLOGIA / PSICOLOGIA Year: 2010 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Index: LILACS Main subject: Female / Male / Adult / Memory Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Psychol. neurosci. (Impr.) Journal subject: NEUROLOGIA / PSICOLOGIA Year: 2010 Type: Article