Visual search and short-term memory in the deaf.

Author(s):  
Stanislav Dornic ◽  
Ragnar Hagdahl ◽  
Gote Hanson
1982 ◽  
Vol 54 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1299-1302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Cellar ◽  
Gerald V. Barrett ◽  
Ralph Alexander ◽  
Dennis Doverspike ◽  
Jay C. Thomas ◽  
...  

To obtain a more precise understanding of the constructs underlying complex monitoring, measures of short-term memory and visual search were administered to 7 male and 13 female college students. The hypothesis was that more rapid short-term memory and visual search would be related to successful monitoring. A correlational analysis indicated that choice reaction time was related to performance ( r = –.38 and –.43) while rate of serial comparisons was not ( r = –.08 and –.28). It was concluded that information-processing measures enhanced the understanding of the underlying processes in monitoring beyond that provided by traditional cognitive tests.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. 661-661
Author(s):  
N. Al-Aidroos ◽  
S. M. Emrich ◽  
J. Pratt ◽  
S. Ferber

2013 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 181-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucie Corbin ◽  
Josette Marquer

Sternberg’s paradigm is currently viewed as a typical short-term memory task and is widely used to tap mnemonic capacities in neuroscience studies. However, Sternberg’s original procedure includes an experimental constraint – recalling the sequence of digits in order – which was not reused in the following studies. In previous research ( Corbin & Marquer, 2008 , 2009 ), we showed that the recall constraint has an impact on the quantitative results as well as on the strategies implemented. These findings led us to wonder whether the presence or absence of this simple experimental constraint could also affect the processes implemented in Sternberg’s task. In order to answer this question, we analyzed the relationships between the performance levels of 50 participants on Sternberg’s task on various well-known span tasks and on a classical visual search task. The results showed that, in the recall condition, Sternberg’s paradigm appears to be a verbal working memory task, whereas in the no-recall condition, the task appears to be a recognition task that involves visuospatial memory capacities. In this latter condition, the processes implemented may be more similar to those implemented in visual search tasks.


2009 ◽  
pp. 29-46
Author(s):  
Claudio Luzzatti ◽  
Carlo Abbate ◽  
Carlo Vergani

- We studied the effect of the target-to-distractor ratio (T/D) and short term memory on a matrix test performance. Higher performance on a visual search test with rising T/D ratio was found. An overall performance score improvement from the first to the third matrix is expected, because of the T/D ratio increase. In a previous study we found a significant difference on accuracy scores between the first and the following matrixes. In this article we demonstrate that an involvement of the short term memory processes could account for this result. Two hundred and twenty seven subjects from the Geriatric Unit of Ospedale Policlinico of Milan were considered. The subjects were 159 female and 68 male, aged 58 to 94 years with 3 to 18 years of education. Patients suffering from acute or chronic neurological diseases, sensorial impairment and alcoholism were excluded. We examined retrospectively the performance obtained by the subjects on a matrix test and a bisyllabic words span test. Correlation between accuracy scores obtained for the different matrixes of the attention test and the span score was then calculated. We found: 1) a significant difference on overall performance score between the three matrixes of the attention test: scores increase with the rise of T/D ratio; 2) a significant correlation between the accuracy score of the second and third matrix and the score of the span test; 3) no correlation between accuracy scores on the first matrix and the short-term memory score. In conclusion our data confirm the positive effect of a larger target-to-distractor ratio on the visual search performance in elderly people. The hypothesis that short-term memory is involved in the execution of the second and third matrix is preliminarly confirmed. The results are discussed in terms of the signal detection theory.


Cortex ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 102 ◽  
pp. 45-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Schneider ◽  
Claudia Bonmassar ◽  
Clayton Hickey

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Burmester

A common problem in vision research is explaining how humans perceive a coherent, detailed and stable world despite the fact that the eyes make constant,jumpy movements and the fact that only a small part of the visual field can beresolved in detail at any one time. This is essentially a problem of integrationover time - how successive views of the visual world can be used to create theimpression of a continuous and stable environment. A common way of studyingthis problem is to use complete visual scenes as stimuli and present a changedscene after a disruption such as an eye movement or a blank screen. It is found inthese studies that observers have great difficulty detecting changes made duringa disruption, even though these changes are immediately and easily detectablewhen the disruption is removed. These results have highlighted the importance ofmotion cues in tracking changes to the environment, but also reveal the limitednature of the internal representation. Change blindness studies are interestingas demonstrations but can be difficult to interpret as they are usually applied tocomplex, naturalistic scenes. More traditional studies of scene analysis, such asvisual search, are more abstract in their formulation, but offer more controlledstimulus conditions. In a typical visual search task, observers are presented withan array of objects against a uniform background and are required to report onthe presence or absence of a target object that is differentiable from the otherobjects in some way. More recently, scene analysis has been investigated bycombining change blindness and visual search in the ‘visual search for change’paradigm, in which observers must search for a target object defined by a changeover two presentations of the set of objects. The experiments of this thesis investigate change blindness using the visual search for change paradigm, but alsouse principles of design from psychophysical experiments, dealing with detectionand discrimination of basic visual qualities such as colour, speed, size, orientationand spatial frequency. This allows the experiments to precisely examine the roleof these different features in the change blindness process. More specifically, theexperiments are designed to look at the capacity of visual short-term memory fordifferent visual features, by examining the retention of this information acrossthe temporal gaps in the change blindness experiments. The nature and fidelityof representations in visual short-term memory is also investigated by manipulating (i) the manner in which featural information is distributed across space andobjects, (ii) the time for which the information is available, (iii) the manner inwhich observers must respond to that information. Results point to a model inwhich humans analyse objects in a scene at the level of features/attributes ratherthan at a pictorial/object level. Results also point to the fact that the working representations which humans retain during visual exploration are similarlyfeature- rather than object-based. In conclusion the thesis proposes a model ofscene analysis in which attention and vSTM capacity limits are used to explainthe results from a more information theoretic standpoint.


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