“…Possibly, searching for a target in a crowded display encourages a deeper level of processing of the target objects (Craik & Lockhart, 1972), resulting in stronger and more detailed memory representations, especially for those tasks that impose difficult search (e.g., conjunction search in Guevara Pinto et al, 2020; Williams et al, 2005). Additionally, our task instructed participants to only remember and recall a surface feature—color—of the objects during presurprise trials, which might have discouraged participants to encode detailed shape information to optimize memory encoding resources (Bates et al, 2019; Fu et al, 2023), compared to other tasks where participants searched for objects and reported their presence (Castelhano & Henderson, 2005; Williams et al, 2005). Thus, while incidental memory of object detail may be poor when remembering specific features of objects, this may be different in other tasks where the requirements for memory encoding are less specified.…”