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Working memory can compare two visual items without accessing visual consciousness
Affiliation:1. University of California, Santa Cruz, Department of Psychology, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, United States;2. University of Oregon, Department of Psychology and Institute of Neuroscience, Eugene, OR 97403, United States;1. Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Institute for Brain and Behavior Amsterdam, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Experimental Psychology, Helmholtz Institute, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Abstract:Recent studies argued that unconscious visual information could access the working memory, however, it is still unclear whether the central executive could be activated unconsciously. We investigated, using a delayed match-to-sample task, whether the central executive is an unconscious process. In the experiment of the present study, participants were asked to compare the locations of two given visual targets. Both targets (or one of the two targets, depending on the experimental condition) were masked by a visual masking paradigm. The results showed an above-chance-level performance even in the condition that participants compared two unconscious targets. However, when the trials with the non-visual conscious experience of the target were removed from the analysis, the performance was no longer significantly different from chance level. Our results suggest that the central executive could be activated unconsciously by some level of stimulus signal, that is still below the threshold for a subjective report.
Keywords:Visual working memory  Delayed match-to-sample task  Unconscious cognitive process
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