Long-term learning and forgetting of feature binding in verbal free recall

被引:0
作者
Sacripante, Riccardo [1 ]
Della Sala, Sergio [1 ]
Logie, Robert H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Dept Psychol, Human Cognit Neurosci, 7 George Sq, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
Feature binding; visual short-term memory; long-term learning; forgetting; VISUAL WORKING-MEMORY; REPETITION; CAPACITY; AGE; DEFICITS; STORAGE; ORDER;
D O I
10.1177/17470218221111343
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Temporary feature bindings can be learned under specific experimental conditions. However, how this learning occurs and how it is forgotten over long intervals is unclear. We addressed this question with repeated presentation of an array of coloured shapes followed by verbal free recall after delays of 1 day, 1 week, and 1 month. A total of 120 participants viewed 24 repetitions of the same study array of six objects each with two features (shape and colour). After 24 trials, 61 participants reported becoming aware of the repetition while 59 reported being unaware. Memory performance improved across trials, with aware participants showing faster learning than unaware participants whose performance appeared to reflect the capacity of short-term visual memory across all repetitions. Both aware and unaware participants recalled some of the array after their allocated delay, showing that learning had occurred during repetition trials, even for unaware participants who showed little or no improvement across 24 repetition trials. Memory for binding showed no change after 1 day compared with performance on the 24th repetition trial, was significantly lower for participants tested after 1 week, and was lower still for those tested after 1 month. Findings are interpreted as consistent with both a short-term, limited capacity visual cache that supports performance during early repetition trials, before learning can have occurred, and gradual strengthening across trials of an episodic long-term memory trace that supports learning. If the episodic trace exceeds the threshold of awareness, this accelerates learning.
引用
收藏
页码:1333 / 1346
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Questioning short-term memory and its measurement: Why digit span measures long-term associative learning
    Jones, Gary
    Macken, Bill
    COGNITION, 2015, 144 : 1 - 13
  • [42] Accelerated long-term forgetting in focal epilepsies with special consideration given to patients with diagnosed and suspected limbic encephalitis
    Helmstaedter, Christoph
    Winter, Babette
    Melzer, Nico
    Lohmann, Hubertus
    Witt, Juni-Alexander
    CORTEX, 2019, 110 : 58 - 68
  • [43] Accelerated long-term forgetting in presymptomatic autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease: a cross-sectional study
    Weston, Philip S. J.
    Nicholas, Jennifer M.
    Henley, Susie M. D.
    Liang, Yuying
    Macpherson, Kirsty
    Donnachie, Elizabeth
    Schott, Jonathan M.
    Rossor, Martin N.
    Crutch, Sebastian J.
    Butler, Christopher R.
    Zeman, Adam Z.
    Fox, Nick C.
    LANCET NEUROLOGY, 2018, 17 (02) : 123 - 132
  • [44] Accelerated long-term forgetting in temporal lobe epilepsy: Evidence of improvement after left temporal pole lobectomy
    Gallassi, Roberto
    Sambati, Luisa
    Poda, Roberto
    Maserati, Michelangelo Stanzani
    Oppi, Federico
    Giulioni, Marco
    Tinuper, Paolo
    EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR, 2011, 22 (04) : 793 - 795
  • [45] Flexible representations in visual working memory and interactions with long-term learning: Commentary on the special issue
    Rhodes, Stephen
    Cowan, Nelson
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 110 (02) : 449 - 460
  • [46] CREB Binding Protein Is Required for Both Short-Term and Long-Term Memory Formation
    Chen, Guiquan
    Zou, Xiaoyan
    Watanabe, Hirotaka
    van Deursen, Jan M.
    Shen, Jie
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 30 (39) : 13066 - 13077
  • [47] Set size and long-term memory/lexical effects in immediate serial recall: Testing the impurity principle
    Neath, Ian
    Surprenant, Aimee M.
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2019, 47 (03) : 455 - 472
  • [48] The memory is in the details: Relations between memory for the specific features of events and long-term recall during infancy
    Bauer, Patricia J.
    Lukowski, Angela F.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 107 (01) : 1 - 14
  • [49] Impaired episodic verbal memory recall after 1 week and elevated forgetting in children after mild traumatic brain injury - results from a short-term longitudinal study
    Lidzba, Karen
    Afridi, Zainab
    Romano, Fabrizio
    Wingeier, Kevin
    Bigi, Sandra
    Studer, Martina
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 15
  • [50] The effect of early and long-term propranolol therapy on learning and memory in mice
    Orhan, Mehmet Fatih
    Tanyeri, Pelin
    Buyukokuroglu, Mehmet Emin
    Buyukavci, Mustafa
    BEHAVIOURAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2023, 34 (04): : 206 - 212