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Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations

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Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations. / Delvenne, Jean François; Braithwaite, J. J.; Riddoch, M. J. et al.
In: Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive, Vol. 21, No. 6, 31.12.2002, p. 681-690.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Delvenne, JF, Braithwaite, JJ, Riddoch, MJ & Humphreys, GW 2002, 'Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations', Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive, vol. 21, no. 6, pp. 681-690.

APA

Delvenne, J. F., Braithwaite, J. J., Riddoch, M. J., & Humphreys, G. W. (2002). Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations. Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive, 21(6), 681-690.

Vancouver

Delvenne JF, Braithwaite JJ, Riddoch MJ, Humphreys GW. Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations. Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive. 2002 Dec 31;21(6):681-690.

Author

Delvenne, Jean François ; Braithwaite, J. J. ; Riddoch, M. J. et al. / Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations. In: Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive. 2002 ; Vol. 21, No. 6. pp. 681-690.

Bibtex

@article{e870d616e10747f9966501216f850309,
title = "Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations",
abstract = "We used a change detection paradigm to assess the effect of spatial configuration on visual short-term memory (VSTM) capacity for single features such as orientation or texture of line elements, with the items either being presented alone or surrounded by circles. Circles were assumed to suppress the global configuration made by the stimuli in a display. We demonstrated that when the support of configural information was minimized (by the addition of circles), VSTM capacity was selectively disrupted for line orientation, with this disruptive effect increasing at the larger display sizes. In contrast, we found capacity limits on memory for line texture irrespective of whether circles were presented to disrupt the coding of lines into a more global configuration. We conclude from these observations that the relational information of individual visual items, based on global spatial configuration, is stored in VSTM and may, in some cases, increase the capacity of VSTM. We discuss the results in terms of the representation of global and local properties of forms in VSTM.",
keywords = "Memory for orientation, Spatial configuration, Visual short-term memory, Working memory",
author = "Delvenne, {Jean Fran{\c c}ois} and Braithwaite, {J. J.} and Riddoch, {M. J.} and Humphreys, {G. W.}",
year = "2002",
month = dec,
day = "31",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "681--690",
journal = "Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive",
issn = "0249-9185",
publisher = "Association pour la Diffusion des Recherches en Sciences Cognitives de Langue Francaise",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Capacity limits in visual short-term memory for local orientations

AU - Delvenne, Jean François

AU - Braithwaite, J. J.

AU - Riddoch, M. J.

AU - Humphreys, G. W.

PY - 2002/12/31

Y1 - 2002/12/31

N2 - We used a change detection paradigm to assess the effect of spatial configuration on visual short-term memory (VSTM) capacity for single features such as orientation or texture of line elements, with the items either being presented alone or surrounded by circles. Circles were assumed to suppress the global configuration made by the stimuli in a display. We demonstrated that when the support of configural information was minimized (by the addition of circles), VSTM capacity was selectively disrupted for line orientation, with this disruptive effect increasing at the larger display sizes. In contrast, we found capacity limits on memory for line texture irrespective of whether circles were presented to disrupt the coding of lines into a more global configuration. We conclude from these observations that the relational information of individual visual items, based on global spatial configuration, is stored in VSTM and may, in some cases, increase the capacity of VSTM. We discuss the results in terms of the representation of global and local properties of forms in VSTM.

AB - We used a change detection paradigm to assess the effect of spatial configuration on visual short-term memory (VSTM) capacity for single features such as orientation or texture of line elements, with the items either being presented alone or surrounded by circles. Circles were assumed to suppress the global configuration made by the stimuli in a display. We demonstrated that when the support of configural information was minimized (by the addition of circles), VSTM capacity was selectively disrupted for line orientation, with this disruptive effect increasing at the larger display sizes. In contrast, we found capacity limits on memory for line texture irrespective of whether circles were presented to disrupt the coding of lines into a more global configuration. We conclude from these observations that the relational information of individual visual items, based on global spatial configuration, is stored in VSTM and may, in some cases, increase the capacity of VSTM. We discuss the results in terms of the representation of global and local properties of forms in VSTM.

KW - Memory for orientation

KW - Spatial configuration

KW - Visual short-term memory

KW - Working memory

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0041764470

VL - 21

SP - 681

EP - 690

JO - Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive

JF - Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive

SN - 0249-9185

IS - 6

ER -