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Target distinctiveness modulates resource allocation in visual working memory for faces: implications for eyewitness face identification

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 17:58 authored by Douglas Barrett, Heather Flowe, Tochukwu OnwuegbusiTochukwu Onwuegbusi
<p>Visual working memory (VWM) is a limited-capacity resource for the temporary storage of visual information (Cowan, 2001). Selective visual attention can protect VWM capacity by filtering relevant from irrelevant information during encoding or maintenance (Griffin & Nobre, 2003).The aim of the current study was to investigate whether target distinctiveness bias the allocation of visual working memory (VWM) resources during the encoding of unfamiliar faces. The results indicate that VWM capacity for unfamiliar faces is poor and declines as a function of the number of faces in the display (load). When one of the faces in the display was made distinct (i.e. by adding a tattoo to it), recall accuracy was independent of load, suggesting bottom-up attentional mechanisms protect against competition for limited VWM resources. These findings have a number of implications in real-world eyewitness scenarios. For example, the accuracy of eyewitness identification is likely to depend upon the number of individuals at the crime scene and differences in their salient visual characteristics.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Volume

24

Issue

3

Date Submitted

2018-03-16

Date Accepted

2018-03-16

Date of First Publication

2018-03-16

Date of Final Publication

2018-03-16

Event Name

European Association of Psychology and Law Conference

ePrints ID

30669

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