Abstract

Visual long-term memory allows us to store a virtually infinite amount of visual information (Brady, Konkle, Alvarez, & Oliva in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 105(38), 14325–14329, 2008; Standing in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 25(2), 207–222, 1973). However, our ability to encode new visual information fluctuates from moment to moment. In Experiment 1, we tested the hypothesis that we have voluntary control over these periodic fluctuations in our ability to encode representations into visual long-term memory using a precueing paradigm combined with behavioral and electrophysiological indices of memory encoding. We found that visual memory encoding can be up-regulated, but it was much more difficult, if not impossible, to down-regulate encoding on a trial-by-trial basis. In Experiment 2, we tested the hypothesis that voluntary up-regulation of visual memory encoding for an item incurs a cost to memory encoding of other items by manipulating the cueing probability. Here, we found that, although the cueing benefit was constant for both low (20%) and high (50%) cueing probabilities, the benefit in the high cueing probability condition came with the overall impairment of memory encoding. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that top-down control of visual long-term memory encoding may be primarily to prioritize certain memories, but this prioritization has a cost and should not be overused to avoid its negative consequences.

Highlights

  • Visual long-term memory allows us to store a virtually infinite amount of visual information (Brady, Konkle, Alvarez, & Oliva in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 105(38), 14325–14329, 2008; Standing in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 25(2), 207–222, 1973)

  • The area under the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve was significantly larger for up-regulation condition than the other three conditions, t(23) = 5.22, p < .001, scaled JZS Bayes factor favoring our hypothesis = 878.77 against baseline condition; t(23) = 4.06, p < .001, scaled JZS Bayes factor favoring our hypothesis = 66.35

  • After verifying that the two neural correlates indexed memory encoding success in our data set, we examined the effect of voluntary control on these correlates

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Visual long-term memory allows us to store a virtually infinite amount of visual information (Brady, Konkle, Alvarez, & Oliva in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 105(38), 14325–14329, 2008; Standing in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 25(2), 207–222, 1973). In Experiment 1, we tested the hypothesis that we have voluntary control over these periodic fluctuations in our ability to encode representations into visual long-term memory using a precueing paradigm combined with behavioral and electrophysiological indices of memory encoding. Individuals can remember information better if its successful encoding promises a larger amount of reward (Adcock, Thangavel, Whitfield-Gabrieli, Knutson, & Gabrieli, 2006; Gruber & Otten, 2010; Gruber, Watrous, Ekstrom, Ranganath, & Otten, 2013) This result seems to indicate that we are capable of up-regulating memory encoding at will, it is not clear whether the anticipation of external reward is necessary to exert such voluntary control

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call