Institute of Brain and Psychological Sciences, Sichuan Normal University, Chengdu 610066, China; Department of Psychology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä 40014, Finland; School of Education, Anyang Normal University, Anyang 455000, China.
Institute of Brain and Psychological Sciences, Sichuan Normal University, Chengdu 610066, China; Department of Psychology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä 40014, Finland.
Cognition. 2024 Jul;248:105810. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105810. Epub 2024 May 11.
Human observers often exhibit remarkable consistency in remembering specific visual details, such as certain face images. This phenomenon is commonly attributed to visual memorability, a collection of stimulus attributes that enhance the long-term retention of visual information. However, the exact contributions of visual memorability to visual memory formation remain elusive as these effects could emerge anywhere from early perceptual encoding to post-perceptual memory consolidation processes. To clarify this, we tested three key predictions from the hypothesis that visual memorability facilitates early perceptual encoding that supports the formation of visual short-term memory (VSTM) and the retention of visual long-term memory (VLTM). First, we examined whether memorability benefits in VSTM encoding manifest early, even within the constraints of a brief stimulus presentation (100-200 ms; Experiment 1). We achieved this by manipulating stimulus presentation duration in a VSTM change detection task using face images with high- or low-memorability while ensuring they were equally familiar to the participants. Second, we assessed whether this early memorability benefit increases the likelihood of VSTM retention, even with post-stimulus masking designed to interrupt post-perceptual VSTM consolidation processes (Experiment 2). Last, we investigated the durability of memorability benefits by manipulating memory retention intervals from seconds to 24 h (Experiment 3). Across experiments, our data suggest that visual memorability has an early impact on VSTM formation, persisting across variable retention intervals and predicting subsequent VLTM overnight. Combined, these findings highlight that visual memorability enhances visual memory within 100-200 ms following stimulus onset, resulting in robust memory traces resistant to post-perceptual interruption and long-term forgetting.
人类观察者在记住特定视觉细节方面常常表现出惊人的一致性,例如特定的人脸图像。这种现象通常归因于视觉可记性,即一系列增强视觉信息长期保留的刺激属性。然而,由于这些影响可能出现在从早期感知编码到后感知记忆巩固过程的任何地方,因此视觉可记性对视觉记忆形成的确切贡献仍然难以捉摸。为了澄清这一点,我们测试了假设的三个关键预测,即视觉可记性有助于支持视觉短期记忆 (VSTM) 形成和视觉长期记忆 (VLTM) 保留的早期感知编码。首先,我们检查了 VSTM 编码中的可记性优势是否很早就表现出来,即使在短暂的刺激呈现(100-200 毫秒;实验 1)的限制内。我们通过在 VSTM 变化检测任务中使用具有高或低可记性的人脸图像来操纵刺激呈现持续时间来实现这一点,同时确保它们对参与者来说同样熟悉。其次,我们评估了即使在设计用于中断后感知 VSTM 巩固过程的后刺激掩蔽的情况下,这种早期可记性优势是否会增加 VSTM 保留的可能性(实验 2)。最后,我们通过操纵从秒到 24 小时的记忆保留间隔来研究可记性优势的耐久性(实验 3)。在所有实验中,我们的数据表明,视觉可记性对 VSTM 的形成有早期影响,在可变的保留间隔内持续存在,并预测随后的 VLTM 在一夜之间。综上所述,这些发现强调了视觉可记性在刺激呈现后 100-200 毫秒内增强了视觉记忆,从而产生了抵抗后感知中断和长期遗忘的强大记忆痕迹。