journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696106/do-cognitive-abilities-reduce-eyewitness-susceptibility-to-the-misinformation-effect-a-systematic-review
#1
REVIEW
Maryanne Brassil, Cian O'Mahony, Ciara M Greene
The fact that memories can be distorted by post-event misinformation has cast considerable doubt over the dependability of eyewitness evidence in legal contexts. However, despite its adverse practical implications, the misinformation effect is likely an unavoidable distortion stemming from the reconstructive nature of episodic memory. Certain cognitive abilities have been reported to offer protection against misinformation, suggesting that mechanisms aside from episodic memory may also be underpinning this type of memory distortion...
May 2, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38691223/from-silos-to-synergy-integrating-approaches-to-investigate-the-role-of-prior-knowledge-and-expectations-on-episodic-memory
#2
REVIEW
Carla Macias, Kimele Persaud
Significant progress in the investigation of how prior knowledge influences episodic memory has been made using three sometimes isolated (but not mutually exclusive) approaches: strictly adult behavioral investigations, computational models, and investigations into the development of the system. Here we point out that these approaches are complementary, each approach informs and is informed by the other. Thus, a natural next step for research is to combine all three approaches to further our understanding of the role of prior knowledge in episodic memory...
May 1, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38689188/neural-representation-of-phonological-wordform-in-temporal-cortex
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David O Sorensen, Enes Avcu, Skyla Lynch, Seppo P Ahlfors, David W Gow
While the neural bases of the earliest stages of speech categorization have been widely explored using neural decoding methods, there is still a lack of consensus on questions as basic as how wordforms are represented and in what way this word-level representation influences downstream processing in the brain. Isolating and localizing the neural representations of wordform is challenging because spoken words activate a variety of representations (e.g., segmental, semantic, articulatory) in addition to form-based representations...
April 30, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38689187/contextual-facilitation-separable-roles-of-contextual-guidance-and-context-suppression-in-visual-search
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Siyi Chen, Hermann J Müller, Zhuanghua Shi
Visual search is facilitated when targets are repeatedly encountered at a fixed position relative to an invariant distractor layout, compared to random distractor arrangements. However, standard investigations of this contextual-facilitation effect employ fixed distractor layouts that predict a constant target location, which does not always reflect real-world situations where the target location may vary relative to an invariant distractor arrangement. To explore the mechanisms involved in contextual learning, we employed a training-test procedure, introducing not only the standard full-repeated displays with fixed target-distractor locations but also distractor-repeated displays in which the distractor arrangement remained unchanged but the target locations varied...
April 30, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653956/the-independent-storage-mechanisms-of-visual-and-vibrotactile-working-memory
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hu Deng, Xinyue Yang, Yiyue Zhang, Shuting Li, Chundi Wang
Whether information in working memory (WM) is stored in a domain-independent or domain-specific system is still the subject of intense debate. This study used the delayed match-to-sample paradigm, the dual-task paradigm, and the selective interference paradigm to investigate the mechanism of cross-modal storage in visual and vibrotactile WM. We postulated that WM may store cross-modal data from haptics and vision independently, and we proposed domain-specific WM storage. According to the findings, the WM can store cross-modal information from vision and haptics independently, and the storage of visual and tactile WM may be domain-specific...
April 23, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639836/reconciling-category-exceptions-through-representational-shifts
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yongzhen Xie, Michael L Mack
Real-world categories often contain exceptions that disobey the perceptual regularities followed by other members. Prominent psychological and neurobiological theories indicate that exception learning relies on the flexible modulation of object representations, but the specific representational shifts key to learning remain poorly understood. Here, we leveraged behavioral and computational approaches to elucidate the representational dynamics during the acquisition of exceptions that violate established regularity knowledge...
April 19, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639835/inhibition-and-working-memory-capacity-modulate-the-mental-space-time-association
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Isabel Carmona, Jose Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Dolores Alvarez, Carmen Noguera
This research aimed to investigate whether the mental space-time association of temporal concepts could be modulated by the availability of cognitive resources (in terms of working memory and inhibitory control capacities) and to explore whether access to this association could be an automatic process. To achieve this, two experiments were carried out. In Experiment 1, participants had to classify words with future and past meanings. The working memory load (high vs. low) was manipulated and the participants were grouped into quartiles according to their visuospatial working memory capacity (WMC)...
April 19, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600427/investigating-acoustic-numerosity-illusions-in-professional-musicians
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alessandra Pecunioso, Andrea Spoto, Christian Agrillo
Various studies have reported an association between musical expertise and enhanced visuospatial and mathematical abilities. A recent work tested the susceptibility of musicians and nonmusicians to the Solitaire numerosity illusion finding that also perceptual biases underlying numerical estimation are influenced by long-term music training. However, the potential link between musical expertise and different perceptual mechanisms of quantitative estimation may be either limited to the visual modality or universal (i...
April 10, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38587756/are-neuronal-mechanisms-of-attention-universal-across-human-sensory-and-motor-brain-maps
#9
REVIEW
Edgar A DeYoe, Wendy Huddleston, Adam S Greenberg
One's experience of shifting attention from the color to the smell to the act of picking a flower seems like a unitary process applied, at will, to one modality after another. Yet, the unique and separable experiences of sight versus smell versus movement might suggest that the neural mechanisms of attention have been separately optimized to employ each modality to its greatest advantage. Moreover, addressing the issue of universality can be particularly difficult due to a paucity of existing cross-modal comparisons and a dearth of neurophysiological methods that can be applied equally well across disparate modalities...
April 8, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38587755/ez-cdm-fast-simple-robust-and-accurate-estimation-of-circular-diffusion-model-parameters
#10
REVIEW
Hasan Qarehdaghi, Jamal Amani Rad
The investigation of cognitive processes that form the basis of decision-making in paradigms involving continuous outcomes has gained the interest of modeling researchers who aim to develop a dynamic decision theory that accounts for both speed and accuracy. One of the most important of these continuous models is the circular diffusion model (CDM, Smith. Psychological Review, 123(4), 425. 2016), which posits a noisy accumulation process mathematically described as a stochastic two-dimensional Wiener process inside a disk...
April 8, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38587754/attention-and-feature-binding-in-the-temporal-domain
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alon Zivony, Martin Eimer
Previous studies have shown that illusory conjunction can emerge for both spatially and temporally proximal objects. However, the mechanisms involved in binding in the temporal domain are not yet fully understood. In the current study, we investigated the role of attentional processes in correct and incorrect temporal binding, and specifically how feature binding is affected by the speed of attentional engagement. In two experiments, participants searched for a target in a rapid serial visual presentation stream and reported its colour and alphanumeric identity...
April 8, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565842/social-exclusion-in-a-virtual-cyberball-game-reduces-the-virtual-hand-illusion
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yingbing Sun, Ruiyu Zhu, Bernhard Hommel, Ke Ma
Sense of ownership and agency are two important aspects of the minimal self, but how self-perception is affected by social conditions remains unclear. Here, we studied how social inclusion or exclusion of participants in the course of a virtual Cyberball game would affect explicit judgments and implicit measures of ownership and agency (proprioceptive drift, skin conductance responses, and intentional binding, respectively) in a virtual hand illusion paradigm, in which a virtual hand moved in or out of sync with the participants' own hand...
April 2, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565841/spatial-attention-in-mental-arithmetic-a-literature-review-and-meta-analysis
#13
REVIEW
Jérôme Prado, André Knops
We review the evidence for the conceptual association between arithmetic and space and quantify the effect size in meta-analyses. We focus on three effects: (a) the operational momentum effect (OME), which has been defined as participants' tendency to overestimate results of addition problems and underestimate results of subtraction problems; (b) the arithmetic cueing effect, in which arithmetic problems serve as spatial cues in target detection or temporal order judgment tasks; and (c) the associations between arithmetic and space observed with eye- and hand-tracking studies...
April 2, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565840/valence-without-meaning-investigating-form-and-semantic-components-in-pseudowords-valence
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniele Gatti, Laura Raveling, Aliona Petrenco, Fritz Günther
Valence is a dominant semantic dimension, and it is fundamentally linked to basic approach-avoidance behavior within a broad range of contexts. Previous studies have shown that it is possible to approximate the valence of existing words based on several surface-level and semantic components of the stimuli. Parallelly, recent studies have shown that even completely novel and (apparently) meaningless stimuli, like pseudowords, can be informative of meaning based on the information that they carry at the subword level...
April 2, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530593/a-mechanism-underlying-improved-dual-task-performance-after-practice-reviewing-evidence-for-the-memory-hypothesis
#15
REVIEW
Torsten Schubert, Sebastian Kübler, Tilo Strobach
Extensive practice can significantly reduce dual-task costs (i.e., impaired performance under dual-task conditions compared with single-task conditions) and, thus, improve dual-task performance. Among others, these practice effects are attributed to an optimization of executive function skills that are necessary for coordinating tasks that overlap in time. In detail, this optimization of dual-task coordination skills is associated with the efficient instantiation of component task information in working memory at the onset of a dual-task trial...
March 26, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530592/a-complementary-learning-systems-model-of-how-sleep-moderates-retrieval-practice-effects
#16
REVIEW
Xiaonan L Liu, Charan Ranganath, Randall C O'Reilly
While many theories assume that sleep is critical in stabilizing and strengthening memories, our recent behavioral study (Liu & Ranganath, 2021, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 28[6], 2035-2044) suggests that sleep does not simply stabilize memories. Instead, it plays a more complex role, integrating information across two temporally distinct learning episodes. In the current study, we simulated the results of Liu and Ranganath (2021) using our biologically plausible computational model, TEACH, developed based on the complementary learning systems (CLS) framework...
March 26, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38528304/the-left-digit-effect-in-an-unbounded-number-line-task
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kelsey Kayton, Greg Fischer, Hilary Barth, Andrea L Patalano
The left digit effect in number line estimation refers to the phenomenon where numerals with similar magnitudes but different leftmost digits (e.g., 19 and 22) are estimated to be farther apart on a number line than is warranted. The effect has been studied using a bounded number line task, a task in which a line is bounded by two endpoints (e.g., 0 and 100), and where one must indicate the correct location of a target numeral on the line. The goal of the present work is to investigate the left digit effect in an unbounded number line task, a task that involves using the size of one unit to determine a target numeral's location, and that elicits strategies different from those used in the bounded number line task...
March 25, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38528303/remembering-the-truth-or-falsity-of-advertising-claims-a-preregistered-model-based-test-of-three-competing-theoretical-accounts
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lena Nadarevic, Raoul Bell
Given the large amount of information that people process daily, it is important to understand memory for the truth and falsity of information. The most prominent theoretical models in this regard are the Cartesian model and the Spinozan model. The former assumes that both "true" and "false" tags may be added to the memory representation of encoded information; the latter assumes that only falsity is tagged. In the present work, we contrasted these two models with an expectation-violation model hypothesizing that truth or falsity tags are assigned when expectations about truth or falsity must be revised in light of new information...
March 25, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38528302/i-know-how-you-ll-say-it-evidence-of-speaker-specific-speech-prediction
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Sala, Francesco Vespignani, Laura Casalino, Francesca Peressotti
Most models of language comprehension assume that the linguistic system is able to pre-activate phonological information. However, the evidence for phonological prediction is mixed and controversial. In this study, we implement a paradigm that capitalizes on the fact that foreign speakers usually make phonological errors. We investigate whether speaker identity (native vs. foreign) is used to make specific phonological predictions. Fifty-two participants were recruited to read sentence frames followed by a last spoken word which was uttered by either a native or a foreign speaker...
March 25, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38519759/quantifying-resource-sharing-in-working-memory
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie Pougeon, Valérie Camos, Clément Belletier, Pierre Barrouillet
Several models of working memory (WM), the cognitive system devoted to the temporary maintenance of a small amount of information in view of its treatment, assume that these two functions of storage and processing share a common and limited resource. However, the predictions issued from these models concerning this resource-sharing remain usually qualitative, and at which precise extent these functions are affected by their concurrent implementation remains undecided. The aim of the present study was to quantify this resource sharing by expressing storage and processing performance during a complex span task in terms of the proportion of the highest level of performance each participant was able to reach (i...
March 22, 2024: Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
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