Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for the flexible recruitment of feature- and object-based processing in visual working memory comparison

被引:2
作者
Saltzmann, Stephanie M. [1 ]
Moen, Katherine C. [1 ,2 ]
Eich, Brandon [1 ]
Chaisson, Felicia M. [1 ]
Fan, Gaojie [1 ]
Goldstein, Rebecca R. [1 ,4 ]
Beck, Melissa R. [1 ,3 ]
Lucas, Heather D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Louisiana State Univ, 236 Audubon Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
[2] Univ Nebraska, 2504 9th Ave, Kearney, NE 68849 USA
[3] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Psychol, 236 Audubon Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
[4] US Naval Res Lab Stennis, John C Stennis Space Ctr, 1005 Balch Blvd, Bay St Louis, MS 39529 USA
关键词
Visual working memory; Feature; -processing; EEG; N200; Feature repetition; CHANGE BLINDNESS; COMPONENT; INFORMATION; STORAGE; P300; ERP; REPRESENTATIONS; MAINTENANCE; MISMATCH;
D O I
10.1016/j.biopsycho.2023.108528
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Previous research is inconclusive on when visual working memory (VWM) can be object-based or feature-based. Prior event-related potential (ERP) studies using change detection tasks have found that amplitudes of the N200-an ERP index of VWM comparison- are sensitive to changes in both relevant and irrelevant features, suggesting a bias toward object-based processing. To test whether VWM comparison processing can operate in feature-based manner, we aimed to create circumstances that would support feature-based processing by: using a strong task-relevance manipulation, and 2) repeating features within a display. Participants completed two blocks of a change detection task for four-item displays in which they were told to respond to color changes (task relevant) but not shape changes (task irrelevant). The first block contained only task-relevant changes create a strong task-relevance manipulation. In the second block, both relevant and irrelevant changes were present. In both blocks, half of the arrays contained within-display feature repetitions (e.g. two items of the same color or shape). We found that during the second block, N200 amplitudes were sensitive to task-relevant but not irrelevant features regardless of repetition status, consistent with feature-based processing. However, analyses behavioral data and N200 latencies suggested that object-based processing was occurring at some stages of VWM processing on task-irrelevant feature change trials. In particular, task-irrelevant changes may be processed after no task-relevant feature change is revealed. Overall, the results from the current study suggest that the VWM processing is flexible and can be either object-or feature-based.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 33 条
[11]   Object-based Encoding in Visual Working Memory: Evidence from Memory-driven Attentional Capture [J].
Gao, Zaifeng ;
Yu, Shixian ;
Zhu, Chengfeng ;
Shui, Rende ;
Weng, Xuchu ;
Li, Peng ;
Shen, Mowei .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
[12]   Object-based grouping benefits without integrated feature representations in visual working memory [J].
Siyi Chen ;
Anna Kocsis ;
Heinrich R. Liesefeld ;
Hermann J. Müller ;
Markus Conci .
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2021, 83 :1357-1374
[13]   Object-based encoding in visual working memory: A life span study [J].
Zhang, Qiong ;
Shen, Mowei ;
Tang, Ning ;
Zhao, Guohua ;
Gao, Zaifeng .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2013, 13 (10)
[14]   Different features are stored independently in visual working memory but mediated by object-based representations [J].
Markov, Yuri A. ;
Tiurina, Natalia A. ;
Utochkin, Igor S. .
ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA, 2019, 197 :52-63
[15]   Role of long-term memory in object-based attention for the maintenance of binding in visual working memory [J].
Sun, Nana ;
Han, Han ;
Lyu, Peijin ;
Song, Ruijun .
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2025, 16
[16]   Neural evidence for an object-based pointer system underlying working memory [J].
Balaban, Halely ;
Drew, Trafton ;
Luria, Roy .
CORTEX, 2019, 119 :362-372
[17]   Unravelling the object-based nature of visual working memory: insight from pointers [J].
Wei, Ning ;
Song, Jintao ;
Zhang, Hongyi ;
Zhou, Tiangang .
MEMORY & COGNITION, 2025, 53 (04) :1178-1186
[18]   Object-based visual working memory: an object benefit for equidistant memory items presented within simple contours [J].
Balta, Gulsen ;
Kandemir, Guven ;
Akyurek, Elkan G. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG, 2023, 87 (05) :1569-1589
[19]   Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for a dissociation between working memory capacity and feature-based attention [J].
Harris, Anthony M. ;
Jacoby, Oscar ;
Remington, Roger W. ;
Becker, Stefanie, I ;
Mattingley, Jason B. .
CORTEX, 2020, 129 :158-174
[20]   Activity in Human Visual and Parietal Cortex Reveals Object-Based Attention in Working Memory [J].
Peters, Benjamin ;
Kaiser, Jochen ;
Rahm, Benjamin ;
Bledowski, Christoph .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 35 (08) :3360-3369