Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Persistent effects of salience in visual working memory: Limits of cue-driven guidance

First online date2025-01-06
Abstract

Visual working memory (VWM) is a core cognitive system enabling us to select and briefly store relevant visual information. We recently observed that more salient items were recalled more precisely from VWM and demonstrated that these effects of salience resisted manipulations of reward, probability, and selection history. Here, we investigated whether and how salience interacts with shifts of attention induced by pre- and retrocueing. Across four experiments, we consistently found the effects of salience on the accuracy of VWM. Spatial and feature cues presented before the memory display improved accuracy when they validly indicated the target, but valid cues failed to eliminate the salience effect. A similar pattern was observed with retrocues. Overall, there was little evidence that the lower accuracy for less salient stimuli could be compensated by increasing their attentional priority through cueing procedures. This suggests that salience plays a critical role in how items are initially encoded into VWM and that once representations are formed, their relative priority based on salience appears difficult to fully override via top-down priority. These findings highlight bottom-up and top-down processes in the interplay of visual attention and working memory. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

Keywords
  • Salience
  • Visual working memory
  • Attentional priority
  • Cues
Research groups
Citation (ISO format)
CONSTANT, Martin, KERZEL, Dirk. Persistent effects of salience in visual working memory: Limits of cue-driven guidance. In: Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance, 2025. doi: 10.1037/xhp0001259
Main files (1)
Article (Accepted version)
Identifiers
Additional URL for this publicationhttps://doi.apa.org/doi/10.1037/xhp0001259
Journal ISSN0096-1523
267views
265downloads

Technical informations

Creation07/01/2025 01:31:41
First validation10/01/2025 10:26:35
Update time10/01/2025 10:26:35
Status update10/01/2025 10:26:35
Last indexation10/01/2025 10:26:36
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack