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What Fluctuating Impact Memory

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailablePsychology

What the fluctuating impact of memory load on decision speed tells us about thinking

Candice C. Morey

Dr

Cardiff University

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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

4:00 PM Europe/London

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Abstract

Previous work with complex memory span tasks, in which simple choice decisions are imposed between presentations of to-be-remembered items, shows that these secondary tasks reduce memory span. It is less clear how reconfiguring and maintaining various amounts of information affects decision speeds. We documented and replicated a non-linear effect of accumulating memory items on concurrent processing judgments, showing that this pattern could be made linear by introducing "lead-in" processing judgments prior to the start of the memory list. With lead-in judgments, there was a large and consistent cost to processing response times with the introduction of the first item in the memory list, which increased gradually per item as the list accumulated. However, once presentation of the list was complete, decision responses sped rapidly: within a few seconds, decisions were at least as fast as when remembering a single item. This pattern of findings is inconsistent with the idea that merely holding information in mind conflicts with attention-demanding decision tasks. Instead, it is possible that reconfiguring memory items for responding provokes conflict between memory and processing in complex span tasks.

Topics

child developmentcognitioncomplex spanconcurrent processingdecision speeddual-task interferenceinformation reconfigurationlead-in processingmemory loadmemory spanprocessing judgmentsresponse timesstorage

About the Speaker

Candice C. Morey

Dr

Cardiff University

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.cardiff.ac.uk/people/view/1156533-morey-candice

@CandiceMorey

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twitter.com/CandiceMorey

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