Liu & Jiang (2005) Visual working memory for briefly presented scenes

Liu, K., & Jiang, Y. (2005). Visual working memory for briefly presented scenes. Journal of Vision, 5, 650-658.

Previous studies have painted a conflicting picture on the amount of visual information humans can extract from viewing a natural scene briefly. Although some studies suggest that a single glimpse is sufficient to put about five visual objects in memory, others find that not much is retained in visual memory even after prolonged viewing. Here we tested subjects’ visual working memory (VWM) for a briefly viewed scene image. A sample scene was presented for 250 ms and masked, followed 1000 ms later by a comparison display. We found that subjects remembered fewer than one sample object. Increasing the viewing duration to about 15 s significantly enhanced performance, with approximately five visual objects remembered. We suggest that adequate encoding of a scene into VWM requires a long duration, and that visual details can accumulate in memory provided that the viewing duration is sufficiently long.

PDF

Tags:

Leave a Reply


What should you put in the notes? Examples include:
  • Thoughts and reflections on the paper
  • Typed up study notes
  • Questions and queries you might have
  • Links to other web pages that discuss this paper
All notes will be moderated and will have to be kept on topic. If it's not one of the above (or similar), it won't make it through moderation - no exceptions!

Search the Database

Recent Notes

  • ellie: heeeey did you ever find the scale i really need to see it for my dissertation.If anyone knows where or how to...
  • Woodrow Stuckemeyer: great post thx
  • yamama: need the bokk of research about p.factors as self esteem- sense of coherence – hardiniss- self efficacy...
  • Lisa Loop: Alright, what the FUCK does this study really say? Dumb it down for me.
  • Eduardo Serrano: ¿Que lobulos se activan cuando se ve television y cuales cuando se esta leyendo un libro

Recent Additions