The benefit of forgetting

Recent research using change-detection tasks has shown that a directed-forgetting cue, indicating that a subset of the information stored in memory can be forgotten, significantly benefits the other information stored in visual working memory. How do these directed-forgetting cues aid the memory rep...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychonomic bulletin & review 2013-04, Vol.20 (2), p.348-355
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Melonie, Hong, Sang W., Kang, Min-Suk, Carlisle, Nancy B., Woodman, Geoffrey F.
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container_end_page 355
container_issue 2
container_start_page 348
container_title Psychonomic bulletin & review
container_volume 20
creator Williams, Melonie
Hong, Sang W.
Kang, Min-Suk
Carlisle, Nancy B.
Woodman, Geoffrey F.
description Recent research using change-detection tasks has shown that a directed-forgetting cue, indicating that a subset of the information stored in memory can be forgotten, significantly benefits the other information stored in visual working memory. How do these directed-forgetting cues aid the memory representations that are retained? We addressed this question in the present study by using a recall paradigm to measure the nature of the retained memory representations. Our results demonstrated that a directed-forgetting cue leads to higher-fidelity representations of the remaining items and a lower probability of dropping these representations from memory. Next, we showed that this is made possible by the to-be-forgotten item being expelled from visual working memory following the cue, allowing maintenance mechanisms to be focused on only the items that remain in visual working memory. Thus, the present findings show that cues to forget benefit the remaining information in visual working memory by fundamentally improving their quality relative to conditions in which just as many items are encoded but no cue is provided.
doi_str_mv 10.3758/s13423-012-0354-3
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Attention - physiology
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Brain research
Brief Report
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive Psychology
Cues
Experiments
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Human
Humans
Inhibition, Psychological
Learning. Memory
Memory
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
Mental Recall - physiology
Psychology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Retention, Psychology - physiology
Visual task performance
Young Adult
title The benefit of forgetting
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