Search // // Sitemap

Home // Contact // Login

Authors

Melissa L.-H. VõDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany
Werner X. SchneiderDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany
Department of Psychology, Bielefeld University, Germany
Ellen MatthiasDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany

Abstract

The study presented here introduces a new approach to the investigation of transsaccadic memory for objects in naturalistic scenes. Participants were tested with a whole-report task from which — based on the theory of visual attention (TVA) - processing efficiency parameters were derived, namely visual short-term memory storage capacity and visual processing speed. By combining these processing efficiency parameters with transsaccadic memory data from a previous study, we were able to take a closer look at the contribution of visual short-term memory capacity and processing speed to the establishment of visual long-term memory representations during scene viewing. Results indicate that especially the VSTM storage capacity plays a major role in the generation of transsaccadic visual representations of naturalistic scenes.

About this article

History

Received: January 23, 2008
Published: December 16, 2008

Citation

Võ, M.L.-H., Schneider, W.X. & Matthias, E. (2008). Transsaccadic Scene Memory Revisited: A 'Theory of Visual Attention (TVA)' Based Approach to Recognition Memory and Confidence for Objects in Naturalistic Scenes. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 2(2):7, 1-13.

Keywords

Scene perception

Transsaccadic memory

theory of visual attention

TVA

processing efficiency