Abstract

The human eye scans visual information through scan paths, series of fixations. Analogous to these scan paths during the process of actual "seeing," we investigated whether similar scan paths are also observed while subjects are "rehearsing" stimuli in visuospatial working memory. Participants performed a continuous recall task in which they rehearsed the precise location and color of three serially presented discs during a retention interval, and later reproduced either the precise location or the color of a single probed item. In two experiments, we varied the direction along which the items were presented and investigated whether scan paths during rehearsal followed the pattern of stimulus presentation during encoding (left-to-right in Experiment 1; left-to-right/right-to-left in Experiment 2). In both experiments, we confirmed that the eyes follow similar scan paths during encoding and rehearsal. Specifically, we observed that during rehearsal participants refixated the memorized locations they saw during encoding. Most interestingly, the precision with which these locations were refixated was associated with smaller recall errors. Assuming that eye position reflects the focus of attention, our findings suggest a functional contribution of spatial attention shifts to working memory and are in line with the hypothesis that maintenance of information in visuospatial working memory is supported by attention-based rehearsal. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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