“…There is a growing body of research examining the development of the ability to store information about objects in working memory. This work has shown that the number of object representations that can be stored in working memory increases throughout infancy and childhood (Cowan et al, 2011; Káldy & Leslie, 2005; Kibbe, 2015; Kibbe & Leslie, 2011, 2013; Pailian et al, 2016; Ross-Sheehy et al, 2003; Simmering, 2012), as does the fidelity and precision of those stored representations (Applin & Kibbe, 2020; Burnett Heyes et al, 2012; Cheng et al, 2020; Guillory et al, 2018). The ability to maintain bindings between objects’ surface features (e.g., color, shape, texture) and their locations in space is extremely limited in early development, increasing from about one feature-location binding at 6 months (Káldy & Leslie, 2005; Kibbe & Leslie, 2011), to around two feature-location bindings in toddlerhood (Cheng et al, 2019a; Kibbe & Applin, 2022; Kibbe & Leslie, 2013), to around four feature-location bindings at 5–6 years of age (Applin & Kibbe, 2020).…”