Floris van den Esschert's research while affiliated with Utrecht University and other places

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Publications (1)


Fig. 2 Trial layout. Sizes and colors are stylized in favor of visualization. First, a memory stimulus is displayed, consisting of 12 bars in one of four orientations. After a delay period, during which only the fixation dot and 12 placeholder dots are visible, a noise mask is presented. In the retro-cue condition, a cue in the form of a small circle is then shown on one of the placeholder dots, which indicates the location of the upcoming target to
Fig. 3 Main results for a moving average window size of 200 trials. Result graphs for a wide range of window sizes can be obtained in the online materials (osf.io/9xr82) and an animated version (gif) at (osf.io/ wqz8g). a Accuracy in the post-cue and retro-cue conditions as moving averages. Thin lines indicate results from individual subjects. Thick lines indicate the estimated mean accuracy for each trial time. Shaded areas
Fig. 4 Individual observer data as percent correct, split into two bins per experimental session. All observers demonstrated a retro-cue benefit after some time
The development of retro-cue benefits with extensive practice: Implications for capacity estimation and attentional states in visual working memory
  • Article
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February 2021

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163 Reads

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4 Citations

Memory & Cognition

Paul Zerr

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Floris van den Esschert

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Stefan Van der Stigchel

Accessing the contents of visual short-term memory (VSTM) is compromised by information bottlenecks and visual interference between memorization and recall. Retro-cues, displayed after the offset of a memory stimulus and prior to the onset of a probe stimulus, indicate the test item and improve performance in VSTM tasks. It has been proposed that retro-cues aid recall by transferring information from a high-capacity memory store into visual working memory (multiple-store hypothesis). Alternatively, retro-cues could aid recall by redistributing memory resources within the same (low-capacity) working memory store (single-store hypothesis). If retro-cues provide access to a memory store with a capacity exceeding the set size, then, given sufficient training in the use of the retro-cue, near-ceiling performance should be observed. To test this prediction, 10 observers each performed 12 hours across 8 sessions in a retro-cue change-detection task (40,000+ trials total). The results provided clear support for the single-store hypothesis: retro-cue benefits (difference between a condition with and without retro-cues) emerged after a few hundred trials and then remained constant throughout the testing sessions, consistently improving performance by two items, rather than reaching ceiling performance. Surprisingly, we also observed a general increase in performance throughout the experiment in conditions with and without retro-cues, calling into question the generalizability of change-detection tasks in assessing working memory capacity as a stable trait of an observer (data and materials are available at osf.io/9xr82 and github.com/paulzerr/retrocues). In summary, the present findings suggest that retro-cues increase capacity estimates by redistributing memory resources across memoranda within a low-capacity working memory store.

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... Compression can also be stimuli-specific, for example through gaining a level of perceptual expertise that allows for more efficient coding of the stimuli (Curby & Gauthier, 2007) by increasing the precision of their representations in WM (Scolari et al., 2008). Finally, efficiency can also be enhanced by optimizing attention allocation to different stimuli or task sets (De Simoni & von Bastian, 2018;Zerr et al., 2021). In contrast to the broad benefits that are expected to result from expanding capacity, enhanced efficiency is expected to be useful only in contexts where these efficiency mechanisms can be applied as well. ...

Reference:

Mechanisms of Cognitive Change: Training Improves the Quality But Not the Quantity of Visual Working Memory Representations
The development of retro-cue benefits with extensive practice: Implications for capacity estimation and attentional states in visual working memory

Memory & Cognition