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Training Improves the Capacity of Visual Working Memory When It Is Adaptive, Individualized, and Targeted
Author(s) -
Eunsam Shin,
Hunjae Lee,
Sang-Ah Yoo,
Sang Chul Chong
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0121702
Subject(s) - working memory training , memory consolidation , working memory , task (project management) , training (meteorology) , set (abstract data type) , consolidation (business) , computer science , audiology , psychology , medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , cognition , neuroscience , engineering , physics , accounting , systems engineering , meteorology , hippocampus , business , programming language
The current study investigated whether training improves the capacity of visual working memory using individualized adaptive training methods. Two groups of participants were trained for two targeted processes, filtering and consolidation. Before and after the training, the participants, including those with no training, performed a lateralized change detection task in which one side of the visual display had to be selected and the other side ignored. Across ten-day training sessions, the participants performed two modified versions of the lateralized change detection task. The number of distractors and duration of the consolidation period were adjusted individually to increase the task difficulty of the filtering and consolidation training, respectively. Results showed that the degree of improvement shown during the training was positively correlated with the increase in memory capacity, and training-induced benefits were most evident for larger set sizes in the filtering training group. These results suggest that visual working memory training is effective, especially when it is adaptive, individualized, and targeted.

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