Abstract
In this study, we investigated the interactions between temporal and spatial information in auditory working memory. In two experiments, participants were presented with sequences of sounds originating from different locations in space and were then asked to recall either their position or their serial order. In Experiment 1, attention during encoding was manipulated by contrasting ‘pure’ blocks (i.e., location-only or serial-order-only trials) to ‘mixed’ blocks (i.e., different percentages of spatial and serial-order trials). In Experiment 2, ‘pure’ blocks were contrasted to blocks in which spatial and serial-order trials were intermixed with a third task requiring a semantic categorization of sounds. Results from both experiments showed that, whereas serial-order recall is linearly affected by the simultaneous encoding of a concurrent feature, the recall of position is mostly unaffected by concurrent feature encoding. Contrastingly, overall performance level was lower for spatial recall than serial recall. We concluded that serial order and location of items appear to be independently encoded in auditory working memory. Serial order is easier to recall, but strongly affected by the processing of concurrent item dimensions, while item location is more difficult to recall, but relatively automatic, as shown by its strong resistance to interfering dimensions in encoding.
Highlights
When keeping track of events in memory, we have to remember what happened, where it happened, and when it happened
Post hoc pairwise comparison showed that accuracy in the 100 % location condition, where participants only had to memorize the location of sounds, was equivalent to the accuracy in the 80 % location condition, where the attention in encoding was partially diverted toward serial order (p = 0.434), and to the 50 % location condition, where participants were instructed to encode both features (p = 0.922)
Experiment 1 In Experiment 1, we investigated whether location and serial-order information are integrated in working memory
Summary
When keeping track of events in memory, we have to remember what happened, where it happened, and when it happened. Do we maintain these different dimensions of the stimuli in integrated representation in working memory or do we have separate traces for each one of these different domains?. Numerous studies have indicated that information about the identity, the location, and the serial order of perceptual objects can be independently encoded in working memory (WM). Recent neuroimaging studies confirmed that the encoding of item identity, location, and serial order seems to be mediated by different brain regions (see Courtney et al 2007 for a review).
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