2020
DOI: 10.7554/elife.56073
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Long-term implicit memory for sequential auditory patterns in humans

Abstract: Memory, on multiple timescales, is critical to our ability to discover the structure of our surroundings, and efficiently interact with the environment. We combined behavioural manipulation and modelling to investigate the dynamics of memory formation for rarely reoccurring acoustic patterns. In a series of experiments, participants detected the emergence of regularly repeating patterns within rapid tone-pip sequences. Unbeknownst to them, a few patterns reoccurred every ~3 min. All sequences consisted… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…The results of Experiment I are in line with previous work and show that individuals learn regular tone patterns over a few repetitions (Agus et al, 2010;Kang et al, 2017;Bianco et al, 2020), such that they are faster in detecting the pattern when they encounter it again (Bianco et al, 2020). Participants detected a repeated regular pattern about 0.12 s earlier than a novel regular pattern.…”
Section: Results Results Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…The results of Experiment I are in line with previous work and show that individuals learn regular tone patterns over a few repetitions (Agus et al, 2010;Kang et al, 2017;Bianco et al, 2020), such that they are faster in detecting the pattern when they encounter it again (Bianco et al, 2020). Participants detected a repeated regular pattern about 0.12 s earlier than a novel regular pattern.…”
Section: Results Results Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…In Experiment V, participants judged, for each sound, whether a visual disc, presented at one of several fixed times relative to pattern onset, precedes or follows the onset of the pattern. Experiment I (Figure 1) and previous work (Bianco et al, 2020) demonstrates that individuals detect a repeated pattern faster than a novel pattern. Hence, we expected that participants in Experiment V indicate an earlier disc time to correspond to the pattern onset for repeated than for novel patterns.…”
Section: Results Results Resultssupporting
confidence: 57%
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