LONG-TERM MEMORY SOURCES IN ATTENTION

In everyday life, we use our past experiences, stored as memories, to forecast and prepare for relevant events to unfold. Memories from different timescales, including long-term memories, act together with our current task goals to anticipate the locations, timings, and defining features of target events. Our lab has contributed to understanding the fundamental role of long-term memory in guiding attention by developing new tasks to isolate memory-based selective anticipation and investigate how it modulates perceptual processing and motor preparation.

Current topics of research include:

  • How memories for different dimensions (space, timing, features) guide proactive anticipation of events
  • Whether and how memory-based templates prioritise or distort stored information to guide attention effectively depending on the task context
  • How different long-term-memory systems contribute to memory-based orienting of attention
  • How memory-based attention and memory-based retrieval change with ageing and become disrupted in different types of neurodegenerative disorders

Theoretical perspectives:

Key empirical contributions: