
Rachel Lerch- PhD Student at Drexel University
Rachel Lerch
- PhD Student at Drexel University
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5
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Introduction
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Publications
Publications (5)
Human visual working memory (VWM) is a memory store people use to maintain the visual features of objects and scenes. Although it is obvious that bottom-up information influences VWM, the extent to which top-down conceptual information influences VWM is largely unknown. We report an experiment in which groups of participants were trained in one of...
Human brains are finite, and thus have bounded capacity. An efficient strategy for a capacity-limited agent is to continuously adapt by dynamically reallocating capacity in a task-dependent manner. Here we study this strategy in the context of visual working memory (VWM). People use their VWM stores to remember visual information over seconds or mi...
Limitations in visual working memory (VWM) have been extensively studied in psychophysical tasks, but not well understood in terms of how these memory limits translate to performance in more natural domains. For example, in reaching to grasp an object based on a spatial memory representation, overshooting the intended target may be more costly than...
This paper focuses on a particularly crucial aspect of haptic perception: the ability to temporarily store and manipulate haptic sensory information-a capacity termed haptic working memory (HWM). Despite the importance of HWM, the extent and nature of its limitations are largely unknown. Recent research however, has demonstrated that an information...
Limitations in visual working memory (VWM) have been extensively studied in psychophysical tasks, but not well understood in terms of how memory limits translate to performance in more natural domains. For example, in reaching to grasp an object based on a spatial memory representation, overshooting the intended target may be more costly than under...