Artículos de revistas
Olfactory or auditory stimulation and their hedonic values differentially modulate visual working memory
Fecha
2008-12Registro en:
Biol. Res. v. 41, n. 4, p.: 379-387, dic., 2008
0716-9760
Autor
Donoso, Ana M.
Faundes, Víctor
Falcón, Felipe
Esparza, Paulina
Maldonado Arbogast, Pedro
Institución
Resumen
Working memory (WM) designates the retention of objects or events in conscious awareness when these are
not present in the environment. Many studies have focused on the interference properties of distracter stimuli
in working memory, but these studies have mainly examined the influence of the intensity of these stimuli.
Little is known about the memory modulation of hedonic content of distracter stimuli as they also may affect
WM performance or attentional tasks. In this paper, we have studied the performance of a visual WM task
where subjects recollect from five to eight visually presented objects while they are simultaneously exposed
to additional - albeit weak- auditory or olfactory distracter stimulus. We found that WM performance
decreases as the number of items to remember increases, but this performance was unaltered by any of the
distracter stimuli. However, when performance was correlated to the subject’s perceived hedonic values,
distracter stimuli classified as negative exhibit higher error rates than positive, neutral or control stimuli. We
demonstrate that some hedonic content of otherwise neutral stimuli can strongly modulate memory processes.