Object files can be purely episodic.


Autoria(s): Mitroff, SR; Scholl, BJ; Noles, NS
Cobertura

United States

Data(s)

2007

Resumo

Our ability to track an object as the same persisting entity over time and motion may primarily rely on spatiotemporal representations which encode some, but not all, of an object's features. Previous researchers using the 'object reviewing' paradigm have demonstrated that such representations can store featural information of well-learned stimuli such as letters and words at a highly abstract level. However, it is unknown whether these representations can also store purely episodic information (i.e. information obtained from a single, novel encounter) that does not correspond to pre-existing type-representations in long-term memory. Here, in an object-reviewing experiment with novel face images as stimuli, observers still produced reliable object-specific preview benefits in dynamic displays: a preview of a novel face on a specific object speeded the recognition of that particular face at a later point when it appeared again on the same object compared to when it reappeared on a different object (beyond display-wide priming), even when all objects moved to new positions in the intervening delay. This case study demonstrates that the mid-level visual representations which keep track of persisting identity over time--e.g. 'object files', in one popular framework can store not only abstract types from long-term memory, but also specific tokens from online visual experience.

Formato

1730 - 1735

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18283924

Perception, 2007, 36 (12), pp. 1730 - 1735

0301-0066

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6971

Idioma(s)

ENG

Relação

Perception

Palavras-Chave #Face #Female #Humans #Male #Pattern Recognition, Visual #Reaction Time #Recognition (Psychology) #Statistics as Topic #Time Factors
Tipo

Journal Article