4.8 Article

Visual Short-Term Memory Compared in Rhesus Monkeys and Humans

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 11, Pages 975-979

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2011.04.031

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [MH-072616]
  2. National Eye Institute [1R01EY020958-01]

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Change detection is a popular task to study visual short-term memory (STM) in humans [1-4]. Much of this work suggests that STM has a fixed capacity of 4 1 items [1-6]. Here we report the first comparison of change-detection memory between humans and a species closely related to humans, the rhesus monkey. Monkeys and humans were tested in nearly identical procedures with overlapping display sizes. Although the monkeys' STM was well fit by a one-item fixed-capacity memory model, other monkey memory tests with four-item lists have shown performance impossible to obtain with a one-item capacity [7]. We suggest that this contradiction can be resolved using a continuous-resource approach more closely tied to the neural basis of memory [8, 9]. In this view, items have a noisy memory representation whose noise level depends on display size as a result of the distributed allocation of a continuous resource. In accord with this theory, we show that performance depends on the perceptual distance between items before and after the change, and d' depends on display size in an approximately power-law fashion. Our results open the door to combining the power of psychophysics, computation, and physiology to better understand the neural basis of STM.

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