Abstract
A gaze-contingent short-term memory paradigm was used to obtain forgetting functions for realistic objects in scenes. Experiment 1 had observers freely view nine-item scenes. After observers’ gaze left a predetermined target, they could fixate from 1–7 intervening nontargets before the scene was replaced by a spatial probe at the target location. The task was then to select the target from four alternatives. A steep recency benefit was found over the 1–2 intervening object range that declined into an above-chance prerecency asymptote over the remainder of the forgetting function. In Experiment 2, we used sequential presentation and variable delays to explore the contributions of decay and extrafoveal processes to these behaviors. We conclude that memory for objects in scenes, when serialized by fixation sequence, shows recency and prerecency effects that are similar to isolated objects presented sequentially over time. We discuss these patterns in the context of the serial order memory literature and object file theory.
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Zelinsky, G.J., Loschky, L.C. Eye movements serialize memory for objects in scenes. Perception & Psychophysics 67, 676–690 (2005). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03193524
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03193524