Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall

Our ability to pay attention to and remember relevant information while ignoring irrelevant information is limited by the cognitive resources we have. Switching between learning words and performing a difficult secondary task can increase cognitive load, deplete resources, and impair performance on...

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Main Author: Zhang, Ruo-Chong
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/72993/
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author Zhang, Ruo-Chong
author_facet Zhang, Ruo-Chong
author_sort Zhang, Ruo-Chong
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Our ability to pay attention to and remember relevant information while ignoring irrelevant information is limited by the cognitive resources we have. Switching between learning words and performing a difficult secondary task can increase cognitive load, deplete resources, and impair performance on the primary task, learning. However, there are instances where interleaving to-be-remembered information and a secondary task improves memory recall at a delay. In this thesis, I report a series of studies and literature reviews examining word-lists learning and recall when presented interleaved with a cognitively demanding secondary task. In the first strand, I varied the difficulty of the secondary task to examine how cognitive load affect the number of recall and how items were organised during recall among young and older adults. In the second strand, I examined approaches that potentially enhance cognitive resources, including noninvasive brain stimulation and caffeine, on memory. The results converge on the dynamic, fluid nature of cognitive resources: firstly, resources do not decrease linearly with increased task difficulty and cognitive load; instead, recall depends on the ongoing resources distribution between remembering words and monitoring secondary task performances. Secondly, resources may be replenished or augmented with endogenous and exogenous modulation. These findings set the foundation for theoretical and measurement advancements for cognitive resources.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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spelling nottingham-729932025-07-31T04:30:12Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/72993/ Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall Zhang, Ruo-Chong Our ability to pay attention to and remember relevant information while ignoring irrelevant information is limited by the cognitive resources we have. Switching between learning words and performing a difficult secondary task can increase cognitive load, deplete resources, and impair performance on the primary task, learning. However, there are instances where interleaving to-be-remembered information and a secondary task improves memory recall at a delay. In this thesis, I report a series of studies and literature reviews examining word-lists learning and recall when presented interleaved with a cognitively demanding secondary task. In the first strand, I varied the difficulty of the secondary task to examine how cognitive load affect the number of recall and how items were organised during recall among young and older adults. In the second strand, I examined approaches that potentially enhance cognitive resources, including noninvasive brain stimulation and caffeine, on memory. The results converge on the dynamic, fluid nature of cognitive resources: firstly, resources do not decrease linearly with increased task difficulty and cognitive load; instead, recall depends on the ongoing resources distribution between remembering words and monitoring secondary task performances. Secondly, resources may be replenished or augmented with endogenous and exogenous modulation. These findings set the foundation for theoretical and measurement advancements for cognitive resources. 2023-07-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/72993/1/full_draft_v2_final.pdf Zhang, Ruo-Chong (2023) Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. memory memory recall cognitive resources cognition
spellingShingle memory
memory recall
cognitive resources
cognition
Zhang, Ruo-Chong
Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
title Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
title_full Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
title_fullStr Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
title_full_unstemmed Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
title_short Impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
title_sort impact of varying cognitive resources on memory recall
topic memory
memory recall
cognitive resources
cognition
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/72993/