1. Distraction biases working memory for faces
- Author
-
Remington Mallett, Anurima Mummaneni, and Jarrod A. Lewis-Peacock
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Visual perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Face space ,Face perception ,Distraction ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,Working memory ,05 social sciences ,Response bias ,Memory, Short-Term ,Female ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Working memory persists in the face of distraction, yet not without consequence. Previous research has shown that memory for low-level visual features is systematically influenced by the maintenance or presentation of a similar distractor stimulus. Responses are frequently biased in stimulus space towards a perceptual distractor, though this has yet to be determined for high-level stimuli. We investigated whether these influences are shared for complex visual stimuli such as faces. To quantify response accuracies for these stimuli, we used a delayed-estimation task with a computer-generated “face space” consisting of eighty faces that varied continuously as a function of age and sex. In a set of three experiments, we found that responses for a target face held in working memory were biased towards a distractor face presented during the maintenance period. The amount of response bias did not vary as a function of distance between target and distractor. Our data suggest that, similar to low-level visual features, high-level face representations in working memory are biased by the processing of related but task-irrelevant information.
- Published
- 2020