The influence of visual short-term memory on size perception |
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Authors: | Yi Pan Wuheng Zuo Xiaoyu Yi |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, Chinapanyirich@zju.edu.cn;3. College of Educational Science and Technology, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, China;4. Department of Psychology, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, China |
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Abstract: | We show that perceived size of visual stimuli can be altered by matches between the contents of visual short-term memory and stimuli in the scene. Observers were presented with a colour cue (to hold in working memory or to merely identify) and subsequently had to indicate which of the two different-coloured objects presented simultaneously on the screen appeared bigger (or smaller). One of the two objects for size judgements had the same colour as the cue (matching stimulus) and the other did not (mismatching stimulus). Perceived object size was decreased by the reappearance of the recently seen cue, as there were more size judgement errors on trials where the matching stimulus was physically bigger (relative to the mismatching stimulus) than on trials where the matching stimulus was physically smaller. The effect occurred regardless of whether the visual cue was actively maintained in working memory or was merely identified. The effect was unlikely generated by the allocation of attention, because shifting attention to a visual stimulus actually increased its perceived size. The findings suggest that visual short-term memory, whether explicit or implicit, can decrease the perceived size of subsequent visual stimuli. |
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Keywords: | Visual working memory Repetition priming Perceived size Attention |
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