Gaze direction affects visuo-spatial short-term memory

Hemispheric asymmetries were investigated by changing the horizontal position of stimuli that had to be remembered in a visuo-spatial short-term memory task. Observers looked at matrices containing a variable number of filled squares on the left or right side of the screen center. At stimulus offset...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and cognition 2014-10, Vol.90, p.63-68
Hauptverfasser: Carlei, Christophe, Kerzel, Dirk
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Kerzel, Dirk
description Hemispheric asymmetries were investigated by changing the horizontal position of stimuli that had to be remembered in a visuo-spatial short-term memory task. Observers looked at matrices containing a variable number of filled squares on the left or right side of the screen center. At stimulus offset, participants reproduced the positions of the filled squares in an empty response matrix. Stimulus and response matrices were presented in the same quadrant. We observed that memory performance was better when the matrices were shown on the left side of the screen. We distinguished between recall strategies that relied on visual or non-visual (verbal) cues and found that the effect of gaze position occurred more reliably in participants using visual recall strategies. Overall, the results show that there is a solid enhancement of visuo-spatial short-term memory when observers look to the left. In contrast, vertical position had no influence on performance. We suggest that unilateral gaze to the left activates centers in the right hemisphere contributing to visuo-spatial memory.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Female
Fixation, Ocular
Functional Laterality
Gaze direction
Hemispheric asymmetries
Humans
Male
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
Space Perception - physiology
Spatial Memory - physiology
Unilateral gaze
Visuo-spatial short-term memory
Visuo-spatial working memory
Young Adult
title Gaze direction affects visuo-spatial short-term memory
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