posted on 2016-11-16, 15:41authored byCarlo De Lillo, Melissa Kirby, Daniel Poole
Immediate serial spatial recall measures the ability to retain sequences of locations in
short-term memory and is considered the spatial equivalent of digit span. It is tested
by requiring participants to reproduce sequences of movements performed by an
experimenter or displayed on a monitor. Different organizational factors dramatically affect
serial spatial recall but they are often confounded or underspecified. Untangling them
is crucial for the characterization of working-memory models and for establishing the
contribution of structure and memory capacity to spatial span. We report five experiments
assessing the relative role and independence of factors that have been reported in the
literature. Experiment 1 disentangled the effects of spatial clustering and path-length
by manipulating the distance of items displayed on a touchscreen monitor. Long-path
sequences segregated by spatial clusters were compared with short-path sequences
not segregated by clusters. Recall was more accurate for sequences segregated
by clusters independently from path-length. Experiment 2 featured conditions where
temporal pauses were introduced between or within cluster boundaries during the
presentation of sequences with the same paths. Thus, the temporal structure of the
sequences was either consistent or inconsistent with a hierarchical representation based
on segmentation by spatial clusters but the effect of structure could not be confounded
with effects of path-characteristics. Pauses at cluster boundaries yielded more accurate
recall, as predicted by a hierarchical model. In Experiment 3, the systematic manipulation
of sequence structure, path-length, and presence of path-crossings of sequences
showed that structure explained most of the variance, followed by the presence/absence
of path-crossings, and path-length. Experiments 4 and 5 replicated the results of the
previous experiments in immersive virtual reality navigation tasks where the viewpoint of
the observer changed dynamically during encoding and recall. This suggested that the
effects of structure in spatial span are not dependent on perceptual grouping processes
induced by the aerial view of the stimulus array typically afforded by spatial recall tasks.
These results demonstrate the independence of coding strategies based on structure
from effects of path characteristics and perceptual grouping in immediate serial spatial
recall.
History
Citation
Frontiers in Psychology 7:1686
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01686/full#supplementary-material