Abstract

Numerous studies have shown that more visual features can be stored in visual short-term memory (VSTM) when they are encoded from fewer objects (Luck & Vogel, 1997, Nature, 390, 279-281; Olson & Jiang, 2002, Perception & Psychophysics, 64[7], 1055-1067). This finding has been consistent for simple objects with one surface and one boundary contour, but very few experiments have shown a clear performance benefit when features are organized as multipart objects versus spatially dispersed single-feature objects. Some researchers have suggested multipart object integration is not mandatory because of the potential ambiguity of the display (Balaban & Luria, 2015, Cortex, 26(5), 2093-2104; Luria & Vogel, 2014, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 26[8], 1819-1828). For example, a white bar across the middle of a red circle could be interpreted as two objects, a white bar occluding a red circle, or as a single two-colored object. We explore whether an object benefit can be found by disambiguating the figure-ground organization of multipart objects using a luminance gradient and linear perspective to create the appearance of a unified surface. Also, we investigated memory for objects with a visual feature indicated by a hole, rather than an additional surface on the object. Results indicate the organization of multipart objects can influence VSTM performance, but the effect is driven by how the specific organization allows for use of global ensemble statistics of the memory array rather than a memory benefit for local object representations.

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