Publication: Visual Long-Term Memory Has a Massive Storage Capacity for Object Details
Date
2008-09-11
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Citation
Brady, Timothy F., Talia Konkle, George A. Alvarez, and Aude Oliva. "Visual Long-term Memory Has a Massive Storage Capacity for Object Details." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105, no. 38 (2008): 14325-14329.
Research Data
Abstract
One of the major lessons of memory research has been that human memory is fallible, imprecise, and subject to interference. Thus,
although observers can remember thousands of images, it is widely assumed that these memories lack detail. Contrary to this
assumption, here we show that long-term memory is capable of storing a massive number of objects with details from the image.
Participants viewed pictures of 2,500 objects over the course of 5.5 h. Afterward, they were shown pairs of images and indicated
which of the two they had seen. The previously viewed item could be paired with either an object from a novel category, an object of
the same basic-level category, or the same object in a different state or pose. Performance in each of these conditions was remarkably high (92%, 88%, and 87%, respectively), suggesting that participants successfully maintained detailed representations of thousands of images. These results have implications for cognitive models, in which capacity limitations impose a primary computational constraint (e.g., models of object recognition), and pose a challenge to neural models of memory storage and retrieval, which must be able to account for such a large and detailed storage capacity.
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Keywords
Multidisciplinary, object recognition, gist, fidelity
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