Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5041867 Consciousness and Cognition 2017 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Visual secondary tasks interfered with specific autobiographical memory retrieval.•DVN interferes with visual processes involved in retrieval.•Irrelevant pictures interfere with visual and executive processes in retrieval.•Findings indicate dissociable roles of visual and executive processes.

Two experiments used a dual task methodology to investigate the role of visual imagery and executive resources in the retrieval of specific autobiographical memories. In Experiment 1, dynamic visual noise led to a reduction in the number of specific memories retrieved in response to both high and low imageability cues, but did not affect retrieval times. In Experiment 2, irrelevant pictures reduced the number of specific memories but only in response to low imageability cues. Irrelevant pictures also increased response times to both high and low imageability cues. The findings are in line with previous work suggesting that disrupting executive resources may impair generative, but not direct, retrieval of autobiographical memories. In contrast, visual distractor tasks appear to impair access to specific autobiographical memories via both the direct and generative retrieval routes, thereby highlighting the potential role of visual imagery in both pathways.

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