Differential outcomes and delayed visual recognition memory in healthy adults using masked outcomes
Research output: Contribution to conference › Abstract › peer-review
The Differential Outcomes Procedure (DOP) refers to the increased learning
and retention of symbolic relations observed in conditional discrimination
tasks when each correct choice is reinforced with its own unique outcome
(for a review, see Mok, Estévez & Overmeier, 2010; Urcuioli, 2005). The
main aim of the present study was to test whether this procedure would
improve the execution of a computerized visual recognition memory task
involving the subliminal presentation of the outcomes in a group of healthy
adults. Participants showed a better accuracy when each stimulus to be
remembered was paired with its own outcome (the differential outcomes
condition). To our knowledge this is the first demonstration that the DOP
can enhance visual working memory performance in adults when a pattern
mask is presented immediately after the outcomes. The implications of this
finding for the theoretical accounts of the differential outcomes effect are
discussed. This research was supported by grant PSI2012-39228 from
Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Original language | English |
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Pages | 126-126 |
Number of pages | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |