Two experiments investigate how absolute and relative spatial cues influence perceptual comparisons between visual short-term memory (VSTM) and current vision. The core question concerned the role of task demands in this process. Two tasks were given across two experiments, differing in the extent they required object-level comparisons. Experiment 1, a feature comparison task, required reporting if any new colour was present in the second of two interleaved displays of four colours inside a surround; Experiment 2, an object comparison task, required report of any changes in colour-shape pairings in the second of two interleaved displays of four coloured shapes in a surround. Absolute and relative spatial organization was manipulated in both experiments by presenting compared displays on the same or contralateral sides, and by having the second display items in the same locations within the surround, in new locations, or repositioned into previous locations of other items. In sensitivity, both tasks showed an advantage for absolute spatial cues, but only the object task showed an advantage for relative spatial cues. In bias, both tasks were similarly influenced by both absolute and relative cues. Results suggest relative spatial cues are always available but only used when making object-level comparisons.
Pilling, Michael Gellatly, Angus
Department of Psychology, Health and Professional Development
Year of publication: 2024Date of RADAR deposit: 2024-08-21