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Mem Cognit. 1974 Jul;2(4):749-57. doi: 10.3758/BF03198151.

Using selective interference to investigate spatial memory representations.

Memory & cognition

T A Salthouse

Affiliations

  1. Human Performance Center, University of Michigan, 330 Packard Road, 48104, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

PMID: 24203750 DOI: 10.3758/BF03198151

Abstract

Two experiments used a selective interference procedure in an attempt to determine whether nonverbal visual stimuli were represented in memory in a verbal or spatial format. A spatial representation was clearly implicated. In both experiments, Ss were required to remember either the positions or the identities of seven target items in a 25-item array. During the retention interval for that information, Ss attempted to recognize schematic face or airplane photograph stimuli in a same-different memory task. Memory performance on one or both tasks was greatly impaired when the recall task involved position or spatial information, but was either much less or not at all affected by an identity or verbal information recall task. Because of the selective nature of the interference and on the basis of certain correlational evidence, the experimental results were also interpreted as providing support for the notion that verbal and spatial information are stored and processed in separate information-processing systems.

References

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