A single system account of enhanced recognition memory in synaesthesia

被引:0
作者
Nicolas Rothen
Christopher J. Berry
Anil K. Seth
Sabine Oligschläger
Jamie Ward
机构
[1] University of Sussex,Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science
[2] University of Sussex,School of Psychology
[3] Swiss Distance University Institute,Faculty of Psychology
[4] University of Plymouth,School of Psychology
[5] University of Sussex,School of Engineering and Informatics
[6] Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences,Max Planck Research Group Neuroanatomy & Connectivity
[7] Pharmacy and Psychology University Leipzig,Faculty of Biosciences
来源
Memory & Cognition | 2020年 / 48卷
关键词
Memory; Recognition; Repetition priming; Synaesthesia; Signal detection;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Researchers often adjudicate between models of memory according to the models’ ability to explain impaired patterns of performance (e.g., in amnesia). In contrast, evidence from special groups with enhanced memory is very rarely considered. Here, we explored how people with unusual perceptual experiences (synaesthesia) perform on various measures of memory and test how computational models of memory may account for their enhanced performance. We contrasted direct and indirect measures of memory (i.e., recognition memory, repetition priming, and fluency) in grapheme–colour synaesthetes and controls using a continuous identification with recognition (CID-R) paradigm. Synaesthetes outperformed controls on recognition memory and showed a different reaction-time pattern for identification. The data were most parsimoniously accounted for by a single-system computational model of the relationship between recognition and identification. Overall, the findings speak in favour of enhanced processing as an explanation for the memory advantage in synaesthesia. In general, our results show how synaesthesia can be used as an effective tool to study how individual differences in perception affect cognitive functions.
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页码:188 / 199
页数:11
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