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The retention and disruption of color information in human short-term visual memory

Nemes, Vanda A; Parry, Neil R A; Whitaker, David; McKeefry, Declan J

Journal of Vision. 2012;12(1).

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Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated that the retention of information in short-term visual perceptual memory can be disrupted by the presentation of masking stimuli during interstimulus intervals (ISIs) in delayed discrimination tasks (S. Magnussen & W. W. Greenlee, 1999). We have exploited this effect in order to determine to what extent short-term perceptual memory is selective for stimulus color. We employed a delayed hue discrimination paradigm to measure the fidelity with which color information was retained in short-term memory. The task required 5 color normal observers to discriminate between spatially non-overlapping colored reference and test stimuli that were temporally separated by an ISI of 5 s. The points of subjective equality (PSEs) on the resultant psychometric matching functions provided an index of performance. Measurements were made in the presence and absence of mask stimuli presented during the ISI, which varied in hue around the equiluminant plane in DKL color space. For all reference stimuli, we found a consistent mask-induced, hue-dependent shift in PSE compared to the "no mask" conditions. These shifts were found to be tuned in color space, only occurring for a range of mask hues that fell within bandwidths of 29-37 deg. Outside this range, masking stimuli had little or no effect on measured PSEs. The results demonstrate that memory masking for color exhibits selectivity similar to that which has already been demonstrated for other visual attributes. The relatively narrow tuning of these interference effects suggests that short-term perceptual memory for color is based on higher order, non-linear color coding.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Published date:
Journal title:
ISSN:
Volume:
12
Issue:
1
Digital Object Identifier:
26 10.1167/12.1.26
ISI Accession Number:
WOS:000299731800026
Related website(s):
  • Related website <Go to ISI>://WOS:000299731800026
General notes:
  • Times Cited: 0
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:158335
Created by:
Parry, Neil
Created:
30th March, 2012, 12:10:58
Last modified by:
Parry, Neil
Last modified:
13th August, 2012, 19:01:58

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