Department of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Memory Lab, Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK.
Sci Rep. 2022 May 31;12(1):9097. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-13000-y.
Recent evidence shows that deaf signers outperform hearing non-signers in some tests of visual attention and discrimination. Furthermore, they can retain visual information better over short periods, i.e., seconds. However, it is unknown if deaf signers' retention of detailed visual information is superior following more extended periods. We report a study investigating this possibility. Our data revealed that deaf individuals outperformed hearing people in a visual long-term memory test that probed the fine detail of new memories. Deaf individuals also performed better in a scene-discrimination test, which correlated positively with performance on the long-term memory test. Our findings provide evidence that deaf signers can demonstrate superior visual long-term memory, possibly because of enhanced visual attention during encoding. The relative contributions of factors including sign language fluency, protracted practice, and neural plasticity are still to be established. Our findings add to evidence showing that deaf signers are at an advantage in some respects, including the retention of detailed visual memories over the longer term.
最近的证据表明,在某些视觉注意力和辨别测试中,聋人手语者的表现优于听力非手语者。此外,他们可以在短时间内更好地保留视觉信息,即几秒钟。然而,目前尚不清楚聋人对手语者在更长时间内保留详细视觉信息的能力是否更优。我们报告了一项研究调查这种可能性。我们的数据显示,在一项探测新记忆细节的视觉长期记忆测试中,聋人个体的表现优于听力个体。聋人个体在场景辨别测试中也表现更好,与长期记忆测试的表现呈正相关。我们的发现提供了证据,表明聋人手语者可以表现出更好的视觉长期记忆能力,这可能是由于在编码过程中增强了视觉注意力。包括手语流利度、长期练习和神经可塑性在内的各种因素的相对贡献仍有待确定。我们的发现增加了证据,表明聋人手语者在某些方面具有优势,包括长期保留详细的视觉记忆。