peer reviewedWorking memory (WM) uses knowledge and relations to organize and store multiple individual items in a smaller set of structured units, or chunks. We investigated whether a crowd of individuals that exceeds the WM is retained and, therefore, recognized more accurately, if individuals are represented as interacting with one another –i.e., they form social chunks. Further, we asked what counts as a social chunk in WM: two individuals involved in a meaningful interaction or just spatially close and face-to-face. In three experiments with a delayed change-detection task, participants had to report whether a probe-array was the same of, or different from a sample-array featuring two or three dyads of bodies either face-to-face (facin...
Chunking is the recoding of smaller units of information into larger, familiar units. Chunking is of...
Visual crowding refers to the phenomenon in which recognition becomes difficult when objects are cl...
Making new acquaintances requires learning to recognise previously unfamiliar faces. In the current ...
Working memory (WM) uses knowledge and relations to organize and store multiple individual items in ...
The binding of features into perceptual wholes is a well-established phenomenon, which has previousl...
The binding of features into perceptual wholes is a well-established phenomenon, which has previousl...
Human memory benefits from information clustering, which can be accomplished by chunking. Chunking t...
Social interactions can strengthen memories, but they can also contaminate them, for instance, when ...
In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work togethe...
The paper highlights the importance of looking at individual differences in working memory in order ...
International audienceWorking memory (WM) is a cognitive system allowing short-term maintenance and ...
The social world is incredibly complex and the ability to keep track of various pieces of social inf...
The evolved architecture of the human brain is argued to contain algorithms to deal with human socia...
What are the mechanisms underlying search in social memory (e.g., remembering the people one knows)?...
Human social networks typically consist of a hierarchically organized series of grouping levels. The...
Chunking is the recoding of smaller units of information into larger, familiar units. Chunking is of...
Visual crowding refers to the phenomenon in which recognition becomes difficult when objects are cl...
Making new acquaintances requires learning to recognise previously unfamiliar faces. In the current ...
Working memory (WM) uses knowledge and relations to organize and store multiple individual items in ...
The binding of features into perceptual wholes is a well-established phenomenon, which has previousl...
The binding of features into perceptual wholes is a well-established phenomenon, which has previousl...
Human memory benefits from information clustering, which can be accomplished by chunking. Chunking t...
Social interactions can strengthen memories, but they can also contaminate them, for instance, when ...
In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work togethe...
The paper highlights the importance of looking at individual differences in working memory in order ...
International audienceWorking memory (WM) is a cognitive system allowing short-term maintenance and ...
The social world is incredibly complex and the ability to keep track of various pieces of social inf...
The evolved architecture of the human brain is argued to contain algorithms to deal with human socia...
What are the mechanisms underlying search in social memory (e.g., remembering the people one knows)?...
Human social networks typically consist of a hierarchically organized series of grouping levels. The...
Chunking is the recoding of smaller units of information into larger, familiar units. Chunking is of...
Visual crowding refers to the phenomenon in which recognition becomes difficult when objects are cl...
Making new acquaintances requires learning to recognise previously unfamiliar faces. In the current ...