Chapter 10-Visual imagery Pt.1 Flashcards

1
Q

Visual imagery

A

“Seeing” in the absence of a visual stimulus

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2
Q

Mental imagery

A

Experiencing a sensory impression in the absence of a sensory input

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3
Q

Why is visual imagery useful

A

Provides a way of thinking that adds another dimension to purely verbal techniques

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4
Q

Imageless-thought debate

A
  • thought is impossible without image (Aristotle)
  • thought is possible without images (people who have great difficulty forming visual images were still capable of thinking-Galton)
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5
Q

Imagery and behaviourism

A

Developed ways to measure behaviour that could be used to infer cognitive processes

-paired-associate learning

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6
Q

How does John Watson describe images

A

As unproven and mythological and therefore not worthy of study

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7
Q

Paivio

A

-memory for pairs of concrete nouns that evoke mental images is better than those which do not evoke mental images

conceptual-peg hypothesis: concrete nouns can create images that other words can “hang from”

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8
Q

Shepard and Meltzer

A

Mental chronometry (rotation)

Participants mentally rotated one object to see if it matched another object

Pair A match (picture plane pairs)
Pair B match (depth pairs)
Pair C do not match

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9
Q

Coglab: mental rotation

A
  • Judge whether objects are identical
  • half the time they were, other half were mirror objects
  • time taken to make a judgement increased as angle of rotation between the objects increased
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10
Q

Kosslyn mental scanning

A
  • memorize picture, create mental image of it (boat)
  • in image, move from one part of the picture to another
  • took longer for participants to mentally move long distances than shorter distances
  • like perception, imagery is spatial
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11
Q

Lea

A

Critique to mental scanning

More distractions when scanning longer distances may have increased reaction time

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12
Q

Kosslyn et al. Response to lea

A
  • island with 7 locations and 21 trips (no distractions in between)
  • it took longer to scan between greater distances
  • visual imagery is spatial
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13
Q

Pylyshyn

A

Spatial representation is an epiphenomenon

-accompanies real mechanisms but is not actually a part of it

Proposed that imagery is propositional
-can be represented by abstract symbols, language

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14
Q

Imagery debate

A

Between:

Propositional representation: symbols, language

And

Depictive representation: similar to realistic pictures

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15
Q

Tacit knowledge explanation

A

Proposed by Pylyshyn in response to Kosslyns island experiment

States that results can be explained using real world knowledge unconsciously

People know that in real world it takes longer to travel longer distances, so they stimulate this result in Kosslyns experiment

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16
Q

Finke and Pinker (arrow experiment)

A

Participants judge whether arrow points to dots previously seen

Longer reaction time when greater distance between arrow and dot (as they were “mentally” travelling)

Not instructed to use visual imagery

No time to memorize, no tacit knowledge

17
Q

Relationship between viewing distance and ability to perceive details

A

Quicker to detect details on larger object

E.g. elephant next to rabbit and then rabbit next to fly

18
Q

Mental walk task

A

participants had to move toward animal until it field their visual field and then tell distance to the animals

Move closer for small animals than for large animals so that the animal fills your visual field

Therefore if comparing elephant and mouse, your distance to mouse is shorter

Proves that images are spatial like perception

19
Q

Perky (perception influencing imagery)

A

Mistake actual picture for mental image

Projected a dim image of a banana onto the screen

When participants were asked to report their image of the banana, their description matched the images that Perky was projecting

20
Q

Farrah’s letter visualization experiment (imagery can influence perception)

A
  1. Subject visualizes an H or a T on the screen
  2. Two squares flash one after another and the target letter can be in either square
  3. Their accuracy was higher when the target letter was the same as the one they had been imagining
21
Q

Imagery and the brain

A

Imagery neurons respond to both perceiving and imagining an object

  • overlap in brain activation
  • visual cortex
22
Q

Le Bihan et al

A

Study measuring brain activity using fMRI

Activity increases to presentation of a visual stimulus

And also increases when subjects are imagining the stimulus

Activity low when there is no actual or imagined stimulus

23
Q

Ganis and coworkers

A

Complete overlap of brain activation by perception and imagery in front of the brain

Differences near back of brain

Participants would hear the name of an object previously studied. In the imagery condition they had their eyes closed and have to imagine it. In the perception condition, subjects saw a faint picture of the object. Would hear “W” and had to report on whether it is “wider than tall”