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Visual Working Memory Representations

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SeminarPast EventPsychology

Visual working memory representations are distorted by their use in perceptual comparisons

Keisuke Fukuda

Dr

University of Toronto Mississauga, University of Toronto

Schedule
Monday, June 21, 2021

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Schedule

Monday, June 21, 2021

10:00 AM Canada/Eastern

Host: Distributed WM Series

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Past Seminar

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Distributed WM Series

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Abstract

Visual working memory (VWM) allows us to maintain a small amount of task-relevant information in mind so that we can use them to guide our behavior. Although past studies have successfully characterized its capacity limit and representational quality during maintenance, the consequence of its usage for task-relevant behaviors has been largely unknown. In this talk, I will demonstrate that VWM representations get distorted when they are used for perceptual comparisons with new visual inputs, especially when the inputs are subjectively similar to the VWM representations. Furthermore, I will show that this similarity-induced memory bias (SIMB) occurs for both simple (e.g. , color, shape) and complex stimuli (e.g., real world objects, faces) that are perceptually encoded and retrieved from long-term memory. Given the observed versatility of the SIMB, its implication for other memory distortion phenomena (e.g., distractor-induced distortion, misinformation effect) will be discussed.

Topics

complex stimulilong-term memorymemory distortionperceptual comparisonsrepresentational qualitysimilarity-induced memory biastask-relevant informationvisual inputsvisual working memory

About the Speaker

Keisuke Fukuda

Dr

University of Toronto Mississauga, University of Toronto

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

fukudalab.org

@KeisukeFukuda4

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twitter.com/KeisukeFukuda4

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