“…Yet, participants detected these subtle changes to previously attended objects at a rate significantly above the false-alarm rate, demonstrating that visual representations do not necessarily disintegrate upon the withdrawal of attention (see also Hollingworth, Williams, & Henderson, 2001). Subsequent work has demonstrated that verbal encoding could not account for accurate memory for the visual details of previously attended objects, as change detection performance remained accurate in the presence of a verbal working memory load and articulatory suppression (Hollingworth, 2003(Hollingworth, , 2004 In addition to testing object memory during online scene viewing, Hollingworth and Henderson (2002) examined longer-term retention of visual object representations. For scenes in which the target was not changed during initial viewing, a delayed, twoalternative forced-choice test was administered after all scenes had been viewed, introducing a delay of approximately 15-20 min, on average, between scene viewing and test.…”