The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to its talk by:
Dr. Ansgar Endress (City University of London)
[
web<http://www.endress.org/>]
Title: Interference and memory capacity limitations
Date: Wednesday, 3 July 2019
Time: 17:00-18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Oktober 6 st. 7., room 101
Abstract:
Working Memory (WM) retains items over brief periods of time for use by ongoing cognitive
operations. WM capacity is thought to be limited to 3 or 4 items. Further, such capacity
limitations are often thought to reflect limitations of active maintenance mechanisms such
as attention and executive function.
Here, I suggest that such severe capacity-limitations mostly arise in experiments with
substantial proactive interference (PI) among items, and that these limitations disappear
when interference among items is reduced. Further, I provide a simple mathematical proof
showing that, under general conditions, interference among memory items guarantees fixed
and limited capacity limitations even in the absence of the maintenance mechanisms that
are supposedly at the root of WM capacity limitations. Interference can also mimic the
predictions of different theories of WM, notably those of slot-like and continuous
resource-like theories. As a result, neither the existence of WM limitations nor their
shape are necessarily diagnostic of the memory mechanisms causing these limitations.
Instead, at least in some situations, WM limitations might be largely automatic
consequences of interference.
In line with this view, I show that the effects of interference on memory performance are
relatively independent of presentation speed and executive secondary tasks, and that the
forms of attention that supposedly yield capacity limitations of 3 or 4 items –
simultaneous attention as measured by multiple object tracking – have fundamentally
different properties from WM.
Based on these and other experiments, I propose that, in many situations, the primary
limitation of memory might be to retrieve relevant rather than irrelevant memory
representations, and that this problem might be exacerbated if “crowding” of the memory
space makes it hard to identify the appropriate memory items.
We are looking forward to see you.
Cognitive Science Events at CEU:
http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
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