Action consequences guide the use of visual working memory

Publication date

2025-01

Authors

Sahakian, Andre
Gayet, Surya
Paffen, Chris L E
Van der Stigchel, StefanISNI 0000000396732697

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Visual working memory (VWM) is a store for temporary maintenance of visual information. It is often disregarded, though, that information is typically stored to enable actions. Therefore, the context of these actions is of great importance for how VWM is used. Here, we questioned whether the severity of the consequence of an action might affect how well information is memorized, and how cautiously it is utilized.We employed an (online) copying task, in which participants reproduced an example display comprised of six items in a grid, using a pool of items. Crucially, we manipulated the severity of penalties: participants had to wait 5 (high) or 0.5 (low error cost) s after an error. Additionally, we manipulated the accessibility of taskrelevant information (a well-studied manipulation in this paradigm): participants had to wait 5 (high) or 0.5 (low sampling cost) s to inspect the example. Our results show that with higher error cost the number of inspections remained comparable, but the number of errors decreased. Furthermore, they show that with higher sampling cost the number of inspections halved, and the number of errors increased. Thus, more severe action consequences increase the reluctance to act on uncertain information in VWM, but do not lead to more attempts to store information in VWM.We conclude that, in contrast to the effect of the accessibility of information, action consequences do not affect how well information is memorized, but affect how cautiously this stored information is utilized.

Keywords

action consequences, copying task, naturalistic task contexts, visual working memory, Taverne, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Language and Linguistics, Linguistics and Language

Citation

Sahakian, A, Gayet, S, Paffen, C L E & Van der Stigchel, S 2025, 'Action consequences guide the use of visual working memory', Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition, vol. 561, no. 1, pp. 4-13. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0001326