Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
931899 | Journal of Memory and Language | 2013 | 25 Pages |
•We compared changes to working memory with cross-domain concurrent memory loads.•Visual maintenance decreased with increases in a concurrent verbal memory load.•Verbal maintenance was not especially impaired by increases in a concurrent visual memory load.•Models of working memory must account for this asymmetric pattern of interference.
Observations of higher dual-task costs for within-domain than cross-domain task combinations constitute classic evidence for multi-component models of working memory (e.g., Baddeley, 1986 and Logie, 2011). However, we report an asymmetric pattern of interference between verbal and visual–spatial tasks, such that imposing a verbal memory load provokes graded decreases in visual memory performance, but imposing a visual memory load does not much affect verbal memory performance. Across multiple experiments, we verify that this pattern cannot adequately be explained as a mere byproduct of stimulus recoding or strategic preference. Current working memory models do not predict this persistent finding, thus a change in ongoing debate about relationships between attention and maintenance of verbal and visual mental representations is necessary.