Paying Attention to Attention in Recognition Memory

Adult Male Memory, Long-Term 05 social sciences 150 Recognition, Psychology Models, Psychological decision making attention cognitive neuroscience Alpha Rhythm Young Adult long-term memory Mental Recall Psychology Humans Attention Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences cognitive processes
DOI: 10.1177/0956797613492426 Publication Date: 2013-10-02T02:08:06Z
ABSTRACT
Reliance on remembered facts or events requires memory for their sources, that is, the contexts in which those facts or events were embedded. Understanding of source retrieval has been stymied by the fact that uncontrolled fluctuations of attention during encoding can cloud results of key importance to theoretical development. To address this issue, we combined electrophysiology (high-density electroencephalogram, EEG, recordings) with computational modeling of behavioral results. We manipulated subjects’ attention to an auditory attribute, whether the source of individual study words was a male or female speaker. Posterior alpha-band (8–14 Hz) power in subjects’ EEG increased after a cue to ignore the voice of the person who was about to speak. Receiver-operating-characteristic analysis validated our interpretation of oscillatory dynamics as a marker of attention to source information. With attention under experimental control, computational modeling showed unequivocally that memory for source (male or female speaker) reflected a continuous signal detection process rather than a threshold recollection process.
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