Working memory capacity and go/no-go task performance: Selective effects of updating, maintenance, and inhibition. |
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Authors: | Redick, Thomas S. Calvo, Alejandra Gay, Catherine E. Engle, Randall W. |
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Abstract: | The ability to temporarily maintain information in order to successfully perform a task is important in many daily activities. However, the ability to quickly and accurately update existing mental representations in distracting situations is also imperative in many of these same circumstances. In the current studies, individuals varying in working memory capacity (WMC) performed different varieties of go/no-go tasks that have been hypothesized to measure inhibitory ability. The results indicated that low-WMC individuals relative to high-WMC individuals showed worse performance specifically in certain conditions of the conditional go/no-go task. Further analyses showed that increasing the temporal lag/number of intervening items between the previous target and the current lure had a deleterious effect on the performance of the low-WMC group only. The results indicate a relationship between WMC and the ability to selectively update, maintain, and retrieve information, especially in interference-rich conditions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | individual differences inhibition maintenance updating working memory capacity |
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