27 results on '"Saito Satoru"'
Search Results
2. Asymmetric negative transfer effects of working memory training.
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Ni, Nan, Gathercole, Susan E., Norris, Dennis, and Saito, Satoru
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,MENTAL orientation ,LEARNING strategies ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SHORT-term memory ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Gathercole et al. (Journal of Memory and Language, 105, 19–42, 2019) presented a cognitive routine framework for explaining the underlying mechanisms of working memory (WM) training and transfer. This framework conceptualizes training-induced changes as the acquisition of novel cognitive routines similar to learning a new skill. We further infer that WM training might not always generate positive outcomes because previously acquired routines may affect subsequent task performance in various ways. Thus, the present study aimed to demonstrate the negative effects of WM training via two experiments. We conducted Experiment 1 online using a two-phase training paradigm with only three training sessions per phase and replicated the key findings of Gathercole and Norris (in prep.) that training on a backward circle span task (a spatial task) transferred negatively to subsequent training on a backward letter span task (a verbal task). We conducted Experiment 2 using a reversed task order design corresponding to Experiment 1. The results indicated that the transfer from backward letter training to backward circle training was not negative, but rather weakly positive, suggesting that the direction of the negative transfer effect is asymmetric. The present study therefore found that a negative transfer effect can indeed occur under certain WM training designs. The presence of this asymmetric effect indicates that backward circle and backward letter tasks require different optimal routines and that the locus of negative transfer might be the acquisition process of such optimal routines. Hence, the routines already established for backward circle might hinder the development of optimal routines for backward letter, but not vice versa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. A Replication of Ishiguro and Saito (2020, https://psyarxiv.com/va5js/)
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Ishiguro, Sho and Saito, Satoru
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FOS: Psychology ,semantic similarity ,web-based task ,short-term memory ,serial recall ,Cognitive Psychology ,Psychology ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,semantic association - Abstract
Registration for a replication of the previous study on the semantic similarity effect on short-term memory, entitled "Whether and how semantic similarity impairs short-term memory: A test with a new index of semantic similarity" (https://psyarxiv.com/va5js/).
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- 2022
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4. Recalling visual serial order for verbal sequences
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Logie, Robert H., Saito, Satoru, Morita, Aiko, Varma, Samarth, and Norris, Dennis
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- 2016
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5. The roles of long-term phonotactic and lexical prosodic knowledge in phonological short-term memory
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Tanida, Yuki, Ueno, Taiji, Lambon Ralph, Matthew A., and Saito, Satoru
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- 2015
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6. Predicting the Structure of a Lexical Environment from Properties of Verbal Working Memory.
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Tanida, Yuki and Saito, Satoru
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SHORT-term memory , *VERBAL memory , *CULTURAL transmission , *JAPANESE language , *LONG-term memory , *PHONOLOGY - Abstract
We analyzed a Japanese lexical database to investigate the structure of the lexical environment based on the hypothesis that the lexical environment is optimized for the functioning of verbal working memory. Our prediction was that, as a consequence of the cultural transmission of language, low‐imageable meanings tend to be represented by frequent phonological patterns in the current vocabulary rather than infrequent phonological patterns. This prediction was based on two findings of previous laboratory studies on verbal working memory. (1) The quality of phonological (phonemic and accent) representations in verbal working memory depends on phonological regularity knowledge; therefore, short‐term phonological representations are less robust for words with infrequent phonological patterns. (2) Phonological representations are underpinned by contributions from semantic knowledge; therefore, phonological representations of highly imageable words are more robust than those for low‐imageable words. Our database analyses show that nouns with less imageable meanings tend to be associated with more frequent phonological patterns in Japanese vocabulary. This lexical structure can maintain the quality of phonological representations in verbal working memory through contributions of semantic and phonological regularity knowledge. Larger semantic contributions compensate for the less robust phonological representations of infrequent phonological forms. The quality of phonological representations is preserved by phonological regularity knowledge when larger semantic contributions are not expected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. The Hebb repetition effect in complex span tasks: Evidence for a shared learning mechanism with simple span tasks.
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Araya, Claudia, Oberauer, Klaus, and Saito, Satoru
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MEMORY ,DIGITAL image processing ,TASK performance ,LEARNING strategies ,SHORT-term memory ,INTELLECT - Abstract
The Hebb repetition effect on serial-recall task refers to the improvement in the accuracy of recall of a repeated list (e.g., repeated in every 3 trials) over random non-repeated lists. Previous research has shown that both temporal position and neighboring items need to be the same on each repetition list for the Hebb repetition effect to occur, suggesting chunking as one of its underlying mechanisms. Accordingly, one can expect absence of the Hebb repetition effect in a complex span task, given that the sequence is interrupted by distractors. Nevertheless, one study by Oberauer, Jones, and Lewandowsky (2015, Memory & Cognition, 43[6], 852–865) showed evidence of the Hebb repetition effect in a complex span task. Throughout four experiments, we confirmed the Hebb repetition effect in complex span tasks, even when we included distractors in both encoding and recall phases to avoid any resemblance to a simple span task and minimized the possibility of chunking. Results showed that the Hebb repetition effect was not affected by the distractors during encoding and recall. A transfer cycle analysis showed that the long-term knowledge acquired in the complex span task can be transferred to a simple span task. These findings provide the first insights on the mechanism behind the Hebb repetition effect in complex span tasks; it is at least partially based on the same mechanism that improves recall performance by repetition in simple span tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. The detrimental effect of semantic similarity in short-term memory tasks: A meta-regression approach
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Ishiguro, Sho and Saito, Satoru
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Semantic association ,Memory, Short-Term ,Semantic similarity ,Mental Recall ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Short-term memory ,Meta-regression ,Serial Learning ,Semantics - Abstract
The literature suggests that semantic similarity has a weak or null effect for immediate serial reconstruction and a facilitative effect for immediate serial recall. These observed semantic similarity effects are inconsistent with the assumptions of short-term memory (STM) models on the detrimental effect of similarity (e.g., confusion) and with observations of a robust detrimental effect of phonological similarity. Our review indicates that the experimental results are likely dependent on the manipulation strength for semantic similarity and that manipulations used in previous studies might have affected semantic assvociation as well as semantic similarity. To address these possible issues, two indices are proposed: (a) strength of manipulation on semantic similarity, gained by quantifying semantic similarity based on Osgood and associates’ dimensional view of semantics, and (b) inter-item associative strength, a possible confounding factor. Our review and the results of a meta-regression analysis using these two indices suggest that semantic similarity has a detrimental effect on both serial reconstruction and serial recall, while semantic association, which is correlated with semantic similarity, contributes to an apparent facilitative effect. An effect that is not attributable to similarity or association was also implied. Review on item and order memory further suggests the facilitative effect of semantic association on item memory and the detrimental effect of the semantic similarity on order memory. Based on our findings, we propose a unified explanation of observations of semantic similarity effects for both serial reconstruction and serial recall that is in good accord with STM models.
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- 2020
9. The relationship between processing and storage in working memory span: Not two sides of the same coin
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Maehara, Yukio and Saito, Satoru
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Short-term memory ,Education ,Languages and linguistics ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2006.07.009 Byline: Yukio Maehara, Satoru Saito Keywords: Working memory; Working memory span; Reading span; Stimulus order effect Abstract: In working memory (WM) span tests, participants maintain memory items while performing processing tasks. In this study, we examined the impact of task processing requirements on memory-storage activities, looking at the stimulus order effect and the impact of storage requirements on processing activities, testing the processing time effect in WM span tests. The stimulus order effect is a phenomenon whereby span scores are higher when span lists end with a shorter task than when they end with a longer task. The processing time effect refers to the phenomenon whereby the processing speed slows for the later processing positions in a list in WM span tests when participants have more memory items to remember. Two experiments demonstrated the domain-specific nature of the stimulus order effect, which was observed only when the processing and storage materials were in the same domain (either verbal or visuospatial domains), and the domain-general nature of the processing time effect, which was observed with any combination of processing and storage materials. Although the domain specificity of the stimulus order effect is compatible with the representation-based interference view proposed by Saito and Miyake [Saito, S., & Miyake, A. (2004). On the nature of forgetting and the processing-storage relationship in reading span performance. Journal of Memory and Language, 50, 425-443.], the domain generality of the processing time effect is inconsistent with their account and indicates the involvement of a central bottleneck in WM span performance. Author Affiliation: Department of Cognitive Psychology in Education, Graduate School of Education, Kyoto University, Yoshida-Honmachi, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan Article History: Received 28 December 2005; Revised 26 July 2006 Article Note: (footnote) [star] Yukio Maehara and Satoru Saito, Department of Cognitive Psychology in Education, Kyoto University. This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Project Number 14710082) and by the Canon Foundation in Europe to S.S.
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- 2007
10. Verbal Working Memory, Long-Term Knowledge, and Statistical Learning.
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Saito, Satoru, Nakayama, Masataka, and Tanida, Yuki
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SHORT-term memory , *VERBAL memory , *STATISTICAL learning , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *LONG-term memory - Abstract
Evidence supporting the idea that serial-order verbal working memory is underpinned by long-term knowledge has accumulated over more than half a century. Recent studies using natural-language statistics, artificial statistical-learning techniques, and the Hebb repetition paradigm have revealed multiple types of long-term knowledge underlying serial-order verbal working memory performance. These include (a) element-to-element association knowledge, which slowly accumulates through extensive exposure to an exemplar; (b) position–element knowledge, which is acquired through several encounters with an exemplar; and (c) whole-sequence knowledge, which is captured by the Hebb repetition paradigm and acquired rapidly with a few repetitions. Arguably, the first two are a basis for fluent and efficient language usage, and the third is a basis for vocabulary learning. Thus, statistical-learning mechanisms (and possibly episodic-learning mechanisms) may form the foundation of language acquisition and language processing, which characterize linguistic long-term knowledge for verbal working memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Person-based organisation in working memory.
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Saito, Satoru and Ishiguro, Sho
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SHORT-term memory , *JOB titles , *ORGANIZATION - Abstract
Working memory (WM) helps maintain information during a variety of cognitive activities in scholastic and social situations. This study focused on a social aspect of WM, specifically, how it maintains information related to people. We investigated person-based organisation of information across four experiments using the reading span task (RST). Person information (i.e., an occupational title) was provided with sentences manipulated across conditions. In Experiment 1, consistent with the assumption that person-based organisation exists in WM, participants performed better when they could easily organise target items in a person-based manner (person-based organisation) than when they were prevented from using such information. Experiments 2 and 3 investigated the process of person-based organisation using alphabetical letters as targets (unlike words in Experiment 1), which prevented possible semantic associations between person information and target items. Experiment 2 replicated Experiment 1, suggesting that contextual retrieval is critical in person-based organisation. Experiment 3 showed the person-based organisation effect even after controlling for the difficulty of the process component in the RST. The results of Experiments 2 and 3 suggest that person information could serve as contextual retrieval cues in WM. Experiment 4, which did not show the organisation effect based on information about an object (i.e., a fruit name), suggests along with Experiments 1 to 3 that the observed organisation effect in Experiments 1 to 3 was specific to person information. In addition to showing the enhanced WM performance by person-based organisation, we have suggested contextual cue-dependent retrieval as the underlying cognitive process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. The effects of Hebb repetition learning and temporal grouping in immediate serial recall of spatial location.
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Sukegawa, Momoe, Ueda, Yoshiyuki, and Saito, Satoru
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LEARNING strategies ,SHORT-term memory ,SPACE perception ,TASK performance - Abstract
The Hebb repetition effect is a phenomenon in which a repeated presentation of the same list increases the performance in immediate serial recall. This provided the theoretical basis for a core assumption of the Atkinson and Shiffrin model regarding information transfer from short-term memory to long-term memory. The Hebb repetition effect was originally reported for the verbal domain, but subsequent studies found similar phenomena using visuospatial paradigms, for example, in serial-order memory for dot locations. The present study examined in two experiments the effects of presentation timing of nine spatial locations on Hebb repetition learning. In Experiment 1, the Hebb repetition effects were observed for spatial locations with constant timing presentation as well as temporal grouping presentation. In the latter condition, all lists were presented with the same temporal structure, that is, temporal pauses were inserted after the third and sixth serial positions. This manipulation led to a better recall performance in comparison with the constant presentation, but did not interact with the repetition. In Experiment 2, the Hebb list was presented with a different temporal structure in every repetition in the random-grouping condition. Although this manipulation is known to eliminate or weaken the Hebb effect in the verbal domain, we observed stable repetition effects in this experiment. This suggests that there might be some domain-specific mechanisms in Hebb repetition learning. These results may facilitate the development of theories of the relationship between short-term and long-term memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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13. The interaction between temporal grouping and phonotactic chunking in short-term serial order memory for novel verbal sequences.
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Tanida, Yuki, Nakayama, Masataka, and Saito, Satoru
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VERBAL memory ,LONG-term memory ,SHORT-term memory ,MEMORY - Abstract
The current study investigated the ways long-term memory contributes to short-term serial order memory of novel verbal sequences, focusing on long-term knowledge of bi-element frequency, that is, co-occurrence frequency of two consecutive elements in a linguistic environment. Participants performed two types of immediate serial recall of nine-element (nine-mora) sequences: low bi-mora frequency sequences where all eight associations between the nine morae were low frequency, and mixed bi-mora frequency sequences, with high-frequency associations for six of the eight bi-morae. Experiment 1 confirmed the bi-directional bi-mora frequency effect, meaning better recall performance for morae having high-frequency association with either the preceding mora (forward association) or the following mora (backward association). In Experiment 2, two temporal pauses were inserted in each list to disrupt high-frequency associations with the preceding mora or the following mora. The results showed that the bi-element frequency effect diminished when the high-frequency backward association was disrupted but the effect remained when the high-frequency forward association was disrupted. We discuss possible mechanisms underlying the asymmetric influence of temporal pauses on interactions between short-term memory and linguistic long-term memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Same task rules, different responses: Goal neglect, stimulus-response mappings and response modalities.
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Iveson, Matthew, Tanida, Yuki, and Saito, Satoru
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GOAL (Psychology) ,UNILATERAL neglect ,STIMULUS & response (Psychology) ,SHORT-term memory ,TASK performance - Abstract
To complete complex tasks, individuals must actively maintain task rules to direct behavior correctly. Failure to use task rules appropriately, termed goal neglect, has been shown across both vocal and manual response modalities. However, previous goal maintenance studies have differed not only in the response modality that they require, but also in the complexity of the stimulus-response mappings that participants must use during the task. The present study examines the effects of both response modality and stimulus-response mapping complexity, separately, on the rate of goal neglect in a modification of a classic goal maintenance task. Seventy-two younger adults were administered a shape-monitoring task, with three between-subjects response conditions: a vocal response with a simple stimulus-response mapping, a vocal response with a complex stimulus-response mapping, and a manual response with a complex stimulus-response mapping. Contrasting the rate at which task rules were neglected between response conditions showed that participants using complex stimulus-response mappings committed more frequent goal neglect than those using simple mappings, but that participants using vocal or manual responses did not differ in their rate of goal neglect once both responses required complex mappings. This suggests that the need to represent novel and complex stimulus-response mappings, of any modality, at the same time as novel task rules within working memory leads to some task rules being insufficiently maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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15. Domain-specific processing in short-term serial order memory.
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Soemer, Alexander and Saito, Satoru
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COGNITION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *LEARNING , *READING , *SHORT-term memory , *TASK performance , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Recent studies of short-term serial order memory have suggested that the maintenance of order information does not involve domain-specific processes. We carried out two dual-task experiments aimed at resolving several ambiguities in those studies. In our experiments, encoding and response of one serial reconstruction task was embedded within encoding and response of a concurrent serial reconstruction task. Order demands in both tasks were independently varied so as to find revealing patterns of interference between the two tasks. In Experiment 1, participants were to maintain and reconstruct the order of a list of verbal materials, while maintaining a list of spatial materials or vice-versa. Increasing the order demands in the outer reconstruction task resulted in small or non-reliable performance decrements in the embedded reconstruction task. Experiment 2 sought to compare these results against two same-domain baseline conditions (two verbal lists or two spatial lists). In all conditions, increasing order demands in the outer task resulted in small or non-reliable performance decrements in the embedded task. However, performance in the embedded tasks was generally lower in the same-domain baseline conditions than in the cross-domain conditions. We argue that the main effect of domain in Experiment 2 indicates the contribution of domain-specific processes to short-term serial order maintenance. In addition, we interpret the failure to find consistent cross-list interference irrespective of domain as indicating the involvement of grouping mechanisms in concurrently performed serial order tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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16. Maintenance of auditory-nonverbal information in working memory.
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Soemer, Alexander and Saito, Satoru
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NONVERBAL communication , *SHORT-term memory , *PHONOLOGICAL encoding , *SYMBOLIC communication , *STANDARD deviations - Abstract
According to the multicomponent view of working memory, both auditory-nonverbal information and auditory-verbal information are stored in a phonological code and are maintained by an articulation-based rehearsal mechanism (Baddeley, 2012). Two experiments have been carried out to investigate this hypothesis using sound materials that are difficult to label verbally and difficult to articulate. Participants were required to maintain 2 to 4 sounds differing in timbre over a delay of up to 12 seconds while performing different secondary tasks. While there was no convincing evidence for articulatory rehearsal as a main maintenance mechanism for auditory-nonverbal information, the results suggest that processes similar or identical to auditory imagery might contribute to maintenance. We discuss the implications of these results for multicomponent models of working memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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17. Cognitive load on working memory both encourages and discourages reasoning bias regarding the mental states of others.
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Maehara, Yukio and Saito, Satoru
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COGNITION , *SHORT-term memory , *ENCOURAGEMENT , *MENTAL status examination , *PHILOSOPHY of mind , *PROTAGONISTS (Persons) , *COMPREHENSION - Abstract
Theory of mind (ToM) refers to the ability to reason about the mental states of others. An increasing number of studies have revealed that working memory (WM) plays an important role in ToM. The present study applied WM loads to adults during a ToM task in order to investigate the impact on mental-state reasoning performance. The task required participants to estimate the probabilities of several possible behaviours for a protagonist following the presentation of a ToM story. Participants were also required to maintain a meaningless two- (light WM load) or seven-letter English alphabet string (heavy WM load) during story comprehension and mental-state reasoning. The results show that the combination of light WM load applied during story comprehension with heavy WM load during mental-state reasoning results in an overestimation of the probability that the protagonist's behaviour will accord with a participant's knowledge. Conversely, a heavy WM load applied during story comprehension, regardless of the type of WM load during mental-state reasoning, did not result in this probability estimation bias. We discuss these findings from the perspective of a WM representation account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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18. The role of visual representations within working memory for paired-associate and serial order of spoken words.
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Ueno, Taiji and Saito, Satoru
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VISUAL learning , *WORD (Linguistics) , *LEARNING modalities , *SHORT-term memory , *LONG-term memory , *RECOLLECTION (Psychology) - Abstract
Caplan and colleagues have recently explained paired-associate learning and serial-order learning with a single-mechanism computational model by assuming differential degrees of isolation. Specifically, two items in a pair can be grouped together and associated to positional codes that are somewhat isolated from the rest of the items. In contrast, the degree of isolation among the studied items is lower in serial-order learning. One of the key predictions drawn from this theory is that any variables that help chunking of two adjacent items into a group should be beneficial to paired-associate learning, more than serial-order learning. To test this idea, the role of visual representations in memory for spoken verbal materials (i.e., imagery) was compared between two types of learning directly. Experiment 1 showed stronger effects of word concreteness and of concurrent presentation of irrelevant visual stimuli (dynamic visual noise: DVN) in paired-associate memory than in serial-order memory, consistent with the prediction. Experiment 2 revealed that the irrelevant visual stimuli effect was boosted when the participants had to actively maintain the information within working memory, rather than feed it to long-term memory for subsequent recall, due to cue overloading. This indicates that the sensory input from irrelevant visual stimuli can reach and affect visual representations of verbal items within working memory, and that this disruption can be attenuated when the information within working memory can be efficiently supported by long-term memory for subsequent recall. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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19. I see into your mind too well: Working memory adjusts the probability judgment of others' mental states
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Maehara, Yukio and Saito, Satoru
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SHORT-term memory , *PROBABILITY theory , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *REASONING , *EXPERIMENTAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL experiments , *HEURISTIC - Abstract
Abstract: Although an increasing number of studies on adults have indicated that working memory (WM) contributes to the ability to understand the mental states of others (i.e., theory of mind), the detailed mechanism by which WM contributes to successful reasoning has not previously been revealed. This study shows that WM modulates the degree of attribution of one''s own knowledge to others'' mental states. Participants were asked to read a story twice (Experiment 2) or as carefully as possible (Experiment 3) and to estimate the probability percentages of possible choices for a naive protagonist''s behavior. The participants were then asked to maintain either a two- or seven-letter alphabet string (i.e., a light or heavy WM load, respectively) during the probability estimation but not during the story comprehension. The results showed that compared to the participants with a light WM load, those with a heavy WM load estimated a significantly higher probability of the choice indicating that the protagonist would behave on the basis of a fact that the participants knew but the protagonist did not. This result indicates that WM moderates the extent to which adults attribute their own knowledge to others'' mental states. The role of WM in theory of mind and in heuristic strategy for making probability judgments was then discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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20. Disruption of visual feature binding in working memory.
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Ueno, Taiji, Allen, Richard, Baddeley, Alan, Hitch, Graham, and Saito, Satoru
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ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTENTION ,COLLEGE students ,COLOR vision ,FACTORIAL experiment designs ,REACTION time ,SHORT-term memory ,VERBAL behavior ,VISUAL perception ,REPEATED measures design - Abstract
In a series of five experiments, we studied the effect of a visual suffix on the retention in short-term visual memory of both individual visual features and objects involving the binding of two features. Experiments 1A, 1B, and 2 involved suffixes consisting of features external to the to-be-remembered set and revealed a modest but equivalent disruption on individual and bound feature conditions. Experiments 3A and 3B involved suffixes comprising features that could potentially have formed part of the to-be-remembered set (but did not on that trial). Both experiments showed greater disruption of retention for objects comprising bound features than for their individual features. The results are interpreted as differentiating two components of suffix interference, one affecting memory for features and bindings equally, the other affecting memory for bindings. The general component is tentatively identified with the attentional cost of operating a filter to prevent the suffix from entering visual working memory, whereas the specific component is attributed to the particular fragility of bound representations when the filter fails. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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21. Exploring the forgetting mechanisms in working memory: Evidence from a reasoning span test.
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Saito, Satoru, Jarrold, Christopher, and Riby, Deborah M.
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SHORT-term memory , *REASONING (Psychology) -- Testing , *REASONING , *TASK performance , *EXPERIMENTAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In working memory (WM) span tests participants have to maintain to-be-remembered information while processing other, potentially distracting, information. Previous studies have shown that WM span scores are greater when span lists start with a long processing task and end with a short processing task than when these processing tasks are presented in the reverse order (e.g., Towse, Hitch, & Hutton, 2000). In Experiment 1, we obtained a similar stimulus order effect in a reasoning span test, using reasoning sentences that were equated for length in terms of the number of constituent words, but which differed in processing complexity; span scores were greater when lists began with a complex sentence and ended with a simple sentence than when this stimulus order was reversed. In Experiment 2, the stimulus order effect was not found when processing duration was held constant while sentence complexity was varied using a computer-paced moving window presentation paradigm. These results suggest that duration-based constraints can affect degree of forgetting independently of the load generated during processing phases in WM span performance and therefore imply that time-related forgetting can occur in WM span tests, particularly when the difficulty of the processing component blocks active maintenance of to-be-remembered material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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22. Irrelevant sound disrupts speech production: Exploring the relationship between short-term memory and experimentally induced slips of the tongue.
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Saito, Satoru and Baddeley, Alan D.
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SHORT-term memory , *MEMORY , *SPEECH , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
To explore the relationship between short-term memory and speech production, we developed a speech error induction technique. The technique, which was adapted from a Japanese word game, exposed participants to an auditory distractor word immediately before the utterance of a target word. In Experiment 1, the distractor words that were phonologically similar to the target word led to a greater number of errors in speaking the target than did the dissimilar distractor words. Furthermore, the speech error scores were significantly correlated with memory span scores. In Experiment 2, memory span scores were again correlated with the rate of the speech errors that were induced from the task-irrelevant speech sounds. Experiment 3 showed a strong irrelevant-sound effect in the serial recall of nonwords. The magnitude of the irrelevant-sound effects was not affected by phonological similarity between the to-be-remembered nonwords and the irrelevant-sound materials. Analysis of recall errors in Experiment 3 also suggested that there were no essential differences in recall error patterns between the dissimilar and similar irrelevant-sound conditions. Weproposed two different underlying mechanisms in immediate memory, one operating via the phonological short-term memory store and the other via the processes underpinning speech production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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23. On the nature of forgetting and the processing–storage relationship in reading span performance
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Saito, Satoru and Miyake, Akira
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SCIENTIFIC experimentation , *SHORT-term memory , *LONG-term memory , *INTERFERENCE (Linguistics) - Abstract
Four experiments examined the nature of forgetting and the processing–storage relationship during performance on a prevalent working memory task, the reading span test. Using two different presentation paradigms, Experiments 1 and 2 replicated finding that the Short-Final lists, which presented a long sentence first and a short sentence last, led to better recall performance than the reverse-order Long-Final lists. This effect was still obtained when the retention duration for the target words was held constant and the amount of sentence processing required during that interval was varied (Experiment 3). However, the effect disappeared when the retention duration was varied while holding constant the amount of sentence processing required (Experiment 4). These results suggest that the amount of processing activities, not the sheer passage of time, may be the critical factor underlying the sentence order effect, thereby challenging purely time-based explanations of forgetting during reading span performance. In addition, the analysis of reading times (Experiment 1) revealed that the number of memory items had a subtle yet reliable negative effect on reading times, suggesting that the processing and storage requirements of the reading span test are not completely independent. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
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24. Effect of articulatory suppression on task-switching performance: Implications for models of working memory.
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Saeki, Erina and Saito, Satoru
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ARTICULATION disorders , *SHORT-term memory , *PHONETICS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL control systems , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MEMORY - Abstract
In a series of experiments, we examine some effects of articulatory suppression in task switching. The results from Experiments 1a and 2a showed that switch costs in the articulatory suppression condition were larger than those in the control and tapping conditions when the switching cues were not provided. On the other hand, articulatory suppression did not have any effect on switch costs in Experiments 1b and 2b, where the switching cues were provided. In Experiment 3, using a computer-assisted experimentation, this pattern of data was replicated in a two-factor design with articulatory suppression and switching cues factors. The results indicate that a specific component in working memory, the phonological loop, might contribute to the performance in task switching, at least in situations where the external task cues were not available. The data reported here suggest that the phonological loop plays an important role in one of the executive control processes, and challenge the traditional idea that the slave systems are simply governed by the central executive in the working memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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25. The phonological loop and memory for rhythms: An individual differences approach.
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Saito, Satoru
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SHORT-term memory , *PHONETICS - Abstract
The purpose of the current study was to examine the relationship between short-term memory for rhythm and the phonological loop in working memory. Results showed that digit span scores significantly correlated with the scores on the rhythmic memory task, and that the correlation between the two scores remained significant even after the common variance with reading speed was partialled out. Partial correlation and regression analyses indicated that the relation between memory for rhythm and digit span scores is mediated by the third component in the phonological loop, the component that is responsible for regulation of timing mechanisms in immediate memory tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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26. Rhythmic information in working memory: effects of concurrent articulation on reproduction of rhythms.
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Saito, Satoru and Ishio, Atsuko
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SHORT-term memory , *RHYTHM , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The study addressed a previously neglected issue in the concept of working memory, namely whether or not rhythmical information is coded and maintained in a phonological loop. Thirty subjects engaged in a task which required them to reproduce the temporal sequence of rhythm. The results showed that the reproduction of rhythm was dramatically reduced by a concurrent articulation, and that the deterioration of rhythm reproduction was larger than that obtained with a concurrent spatial task which would not diminish the activity of the phonological loop directly. An articulatory component of the working memory apparently plays an important role in memorizing rhythms. Furthermore, the sparse-dense rhythm (a pattern which started with sparse temporal structure and ended with a dense one) allowed better memorization than a dense-sparse pattern. The sources of the sparse-dense superiority effect are discussed in terms of the working memory for rhythmic information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cognitive and neural underpinnings of goal maintenance in young children.
- Author
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Yanaoka, Kaichi, Moriguchi, Yusuke, and Saito, Satoru
- Subjects
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CHILD support , *RESPONSE inhibition , *INTEGRAL representations , *PRESCHOOL children , *INTERNAL auditing , *EXECUTIVE function , *FRONTAL lobe , *COGNITION , *SHORT-term memory , *GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Active maintenance of goal representations is an integral part of our mental regulatory processes. Previous developmental studies have highlighted goal neglect, which is the phenomenon caused by a failure to maintain goal representations, and demonstrated developmental changes of the ability to maintain goal representations among preschoolers. Yet, few studies have explored the cognitive mechanisms underlying preschoolers' development of goal maintenance. The first aim of this study was to test whether working memory capacity and inhibitory control contribute to goal maintenance using a paradigm for measuring goal neglect. Moreover, although recent studies have shown that preschoolers recruit lateral prefrontal regions in performing executive functions tasks, they could not specify the neural underpinnings of goal maintenance. Thus, the second aim was to examine whether lateral prefrontal regions played a key role in maintaining goal representations using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Our results showed that developmental differences in inhibitory control predicted the degree of goal neglect. It was also demonstrated that activation in the right prefrontal region was associated with children's successful avoidance of goal neglect. These findings offer important insights into the cognitive and neural underpinnings of goal maintenance in preschoolers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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