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Visual working memory as the substrate for mental rotation
Author(s) -
J.-S. Hyun,
Steven J. Luck
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.126
H-Index - 113
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/5.8.425
Subject(s) - mental rotation , rotation (mathematics) , task (project management) , working memory , psychology , mental image , object (grammar) , cognitive psychology , computer vision , computer science , artificial intelligence , cognition , management , economics , neuroscience
In mental rotation, a mental representation of an object must be rotated while the actual object remains visible. Where is this representation stored while it is being rotated? To answer this question, observers were asked to perform a mental rotation task during the delay interval of a visual working memory task. When the working memory task required the storage of object features, substantial bidirectional interference was observed between the memory and rotation tasks, and the interference increased with the degree of rotation. However, rotation-dependent interference was not observed when a spatial working memory task was used instead of an object working memory task. Thus, the object working memory subsystem--not the spatial working memory subsystem--provides the buffer in which object representations are stored while they undergo mental rotation. More broadly, the nature of the information being stored--not the nature of the operations performed on this information--may determine which subsystem stores the information.

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