奇异效应与视觉意象:并行的视觉空间干扰任务无影响,表明视觉意象作用不大。

Miri Besken, Neil W Mulligan
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引用次数: 2

摘要

古代和现代的作家都认为怪诞的图像能增强记忆。研究记录了怪异效应,一项标准技术发现,描述不寻常、难以置信或奇怪场景的句子比描述合理、日常或常见场景的句子更容易被记住。毫不奇怪,这种效果通常归因于视觉图像,这种效果通常被称为奇异图像效果。但是,想象的作用一直存在争议,即使研究发现很难明确区分想象的影响与其他可能的怪诞优势基础。目前的实验通过干扰编码过程中的视觉图像过程来评估视觉图像假设,如果确实是由于图像,则应该减少奇异效应。具体来说,一组在对句子进行编码的过程中进行了一项有选择地破坏视觉工作记忆(和视觉意象)的并发任务;而对照组则在不分散注意力的情况下对句子进行编码。在四个实验中,干扰任务是动态视觉噪声、空间敲击任务和视觉广度任务。每个实验都发现了一种强大的奇异效应,这种效应从未因视觉空间分心而减弱。综合分析、元分析和贝叶斯分析与个别实验的结果一致。结果表明,视觉意象对奇异效应的影响不大。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The bizarreness effect and visual imagery: No impact of concurrent visuo-spatial distractor tasks indicates little role for visual imagery.

Ancient as well as modern writers have promoted the idea that bizarre images enhance memory. Research has documented bizarreness effects, with one standard technique finding that sentences describing unusual, implausible, or bizarre scenarios are better remembered than sentences describing plausible, every day, or common scenarios. Not surprisingly, this effect is often attributed to visual imagery, and the effect often referred to as the bizarre imagery effect. But the role of imagery has been disputed even as research has found it difficult to clearly distinguish the effects of imagery from other possible bases for the bizarreness advantage. The current experiments assessed the visual-imagery hypothesis by disrupting visual imagery processes during encoding, which should reduce the bizarreness effect if it is indeed due to imagery. Specifically, one group carried out a concurrent task that selectively disrupted visual working memory (and visual imagery) during the encoding of sentences; a control group encoded the sentences without distraction. Across four experiments, the distractor task was dynamic visual noise, the spatial tapping task, and a visual span task. Each experiment found a robust bizarreness effect that was never reduced by visuospatial distraction. Combined, meta-analytic, and Bayesian analyses concurred with the results of the individual experiments. The results indicate little role for visual imagery in the bizarreness effect. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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