2019
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44998-3
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Working memory capacity affects trade-off between quality and quantity only when stimulus exposure duration is sufficient: Evidence for the two-phase model

Abstract: The relation between visual working memory (VWM) capacity and attention has attracted much interest. In this study, we investigated the correlation between the participants’ VWM capacity and their ability to voluntarily trade off the precision and number of items remembered. The two-phase resource allocation model proposed by Ye et al . (2017) suggests that for a given set size, it takes a certain amount of consolidation time for an individual to control attention to adjust the VWM resou… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
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“…For example, previous studies have used a change detection task to quantify VWM capacity and then found positive correlations between VWM capacity and the ability to filter distractors (Cowan & Morey, 2006;Fukuda & Vogel, 2009;Vogel et al, 2005). Our recent study also found that, when memory stimuli were presented for a sufficiently WORKING MEMORY CAPACITY DIFFERENCES & RETRO-CUE BENEFITS long period, participants' VWM capacity positively correlated with their ability to voluntarily trade off VWM numbers and precision (Ye et al, 2019; trade-off here refers to individuals adjusting their VWM resource allocation between numbers and precision). Moreover, a study used a complex span task to quantify working memory capacity and found that working memory capacity can account for significant portions of performance variance (i.e., the accuracy of a change detection task) in the object-based retro-cue condition (Robison & Unsworth, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 50%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…For example, previous studies have used a change detection task to quantify VWM capacity and then found positive correlations between VWM capacity and the ability to filter distractors (Cowan & Morey, 2006;Fukuda & Vogel, 2009;Vogel et al, 2005). Our recent study also found that, when memory stimuli were presented for a sufficiently WORKING MEMORY CAPACITY DIFFERENCES & RETRO-CUE BENEFITS long period, participants' VWM capacity positively correlated with their ability to voluntarily trade off VWM numbers and precision (Ye et al, 2019; trade-off here refers to individuals adjusting their VWM resource allocation between numbers and precision). Moreover, a study used a complex span task to quantify working memory capacity and found that working memory capacity can account for significant portions of performance variance (i.e., the accuracy of a change detection task) in the object-based retro-cue condition (Robison & Unsworth, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…This result shows that, although VWM capacity and performance (offsets) correlate in both the object-based and dimension-based cue tasks, high-VWM-capacity participants obtained neither more nor fewer RCBs through retro-cues compared to low-VWM-capacity participants. Previous studies have associated participants' VWM capacity with the ability to use attention control to filter distractors or trade off VWM numbers and precision (Vogel et al, 2005;Ye et al, 2019). These results imply that participants can use internal attention to affect the VWM process in many ways.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
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“…After the stimulus disappeared, participants needed to "maintain" VWM representations and then "retrieve" them in subsequent tasks in order to complete the whole cognitive process of VWM (Ye, 2018). In addition, VWM consolidation comprises two different phases (Ye et al, 2017(Ye et al, , 2019(Ye et al, , 2020. In the early consolidation phase, individuals automatically create low-precision representations.…”
Section: Different Stages In the Cognitive Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…VWM has been proposed to be a cognitive system that temporarily stores and manipulates visual information to meet the need of ongoing cognitive tasks (Luck & Vogel, 1997. In recent years, a growing body of research exploring the mechanisms of VWM suggests that it is a flexible, dynamic process, rather than a fixed one (Christophel et al, 2017(Christophel et al, , 2018Ma et al, 2014;Myers et al, 2018;Wolff et al, 2017;Ye et al, 2019). Despite this, VWM capacity is extremely limited, resulting in the visual system demanding tasks that exceed its limits.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%