The upside of cumulative conceptual interference on exemplar-level mnemonic discrimination.

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
Memory & Cognition Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-06 DOI:10.3758/s13421-024-01563-2
Emma Delhaye, Giorgia D'Innocenzo, Ana Raposo, Moreno I Coco
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Abstract

Although long-term visual memory (LTVM) has a remarkable capacity, the fidelity of its episodic representations can be influenced by at least two intertwined interference mechanisms during the encoding of objects belonging to the same category: the capacity to hold similar episodic traces (e.g., different birds) and the conceptual similarity of the encoded traces (e.g., a sparrow shares more features with a robin than with a penguin). The precision of episodic traces can be tested by having participants discriminate lures (unseen objects) from targets (seen objects) representing different exemplars of the same concept (e.g., two visually similar penguins), which generates interference at retrieval that can be solved if efficient pattern separation happened during encoding. The present study examines the impact of within-category encoding interference on the fidelity of mnemonic object representations, by manipulating an index of cumulative conceptual interference that represents the concurrent impact of capacity and similarity. The precision of mnemonic discrimination was further assessed by measuring the impact of visual similarity between targets and lures in a recognition task. Our results show a significant decrement in the correct identification of targets for increasing interference. Correct rejections of lures were also negatively impacted by cumulative interference as well as by the visual similarity with the target. Most interestingly though, mnemonic discrimination for targets presented with a visually similar lure was more difficult when objects were encoded under lower, not higher, interference. These findings counter a simply additive impact of interference on the fidelity of object representations providing a finer-grained, multi-factorial, understanding of interference in LTVM.

Abstract Image

累积概念干扰对范例级记忆辨别力的影响。
尽管长期视觉记忆(LTVM)具有非凡的容量,但在对属于同一类别的物体进行编码时,其情节表征的保真度至少会受到两种相互交织的干扰机制的影响:一是保持类似情节痕迹(如不同的鸟)的能力,二是编码痕迹的概念相似性(如麻雀与知更鸟的共同特征多于企鹅)。让参与者从代表同一概念不同范例的目标(如两只视觉相似的企鹅)中分辨出诱饵(未见过的物体)和目标(见过的物体),可以测试情节痕迹的精确性,如果在编码过程中进行了有效的模式分离,就可以解决检索时产生的干扰问题。本研究通过操纵代表容量和相似性同时影响的累积概念干扰指数,考察了类别内编码干扰对记忆性对象表征保真度的影响。通过测量识别任务中目标和诱饵之间视觉相似性的影响,进一步评估了记忆辨别的精确性。我们的结果表明,随着干扰的增加,目标的正确识别率明显下降。诱饵的正确拒绝也受到累积干扰和目标视觉相似性的负面影响。但最有趣的是,当目标在较低而非较高的干扰下编码时,记忆辨别视觉相似诱饵的目标更加困难。这些发现反驳了干扰对物体表征保真度的简单叠加影响,提供了对LTVM中干扰的更精细、多因素的理解。
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来源期刊
Memory & Cognition
Memory & Cognition PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
8.30%
发文量
112
期刊介绍: Memory & Cognition covers human memory and learning, conceptual processes, psycholinguistics, problem solving, thinking, decision making, and skilled performance, including relevant work in the areas of computer simulation, information processing, mathematical psychology, developmental psychology, and experimental social psychology.
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