4.7 Article

Visual working memory directly alters perception

Journal

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 827-836

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41562-019-0640-4

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Funding

  1. GWU

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Visual working memory (VWM), the ability to temporarily maintain and manipulate information, underlies a variety of critical high-level behaviours from directing attention(1-4) to making complex decisions(5). Here we show that its impact extends to even the most basic levels of perceptual processing, directly interacting with and even distorting the physical appearance of visual features. This interference results from and can be predicted by the recruitment of posterior perceptual cortices to maintain information in VWM6-9, which causes an overlap with the neuronal populations supporting perceptual processing(10-15). Across three sets of experiments, we demonstrated bidirectional interference between VWM and low-level perception. Specifically, for both maintained colours and orientations, presenting a distractor created bias in VWM representation depending on the similarity between incoming and maintained information, consistent with the known tuning curves for these features. Moreover, holding an item in mind directly altered the appearance of new stimuli, demonstrated by changes in psychophysical discrimination thresholds. Thus, as a consequence of sharing the early visual cortices, what you see and what you are holding in mind are intertwined at even the most fundamental stages of processing.

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