visual imagery. visual imagery what is it? what’s it like? what’s it for?

39
Visual Imagery

Upload: jewel-logan

Post on 02-Jan-2016

225 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Visual Imagery

Page 2: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Visual imagery

• What is it?

• What’s it like?

• What’s it for?

Page 3: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery

• What shape are Snoopy’s ears?

• If you were driving from Gilmer to the corner and the gate was down, what would be the shortest detour?

• What color is a bee’s head?

• Is a leopard’s tail more than half the length of its body?

Page 4: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery

Most people report “looking” at a mental picture to answer such

questions.

This implies (but doesn’t prove) that there is a type of representation that is quasi-pictorial, that is, has some of the properties of a picture.

Page 5: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Analog vs. proposition: “A ball is on a box”

on (ball,box)

Proposition• Relation• Syntax• Truth value• Abstract• Not spatial

Analog• No distinct relation• No syntax• Truth value only when

described• Concrete• Spatial medium

Page 6: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

How do we know that there are images?

• Big controversy through the 1970’s

• Basic answer is that imagery has a lot of properties that you would predict it would have if it were quasi-pictorial, that propositions wouldn’t have.

Page 7: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 1: Rotation

Same (rotated)Or different (mirror)

Page 8: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 1: Rotation

Time to answer question related to angle of rotation: easy to interpret as imaging the pieces rotating.

Page 9: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 2: Size zooming

Page 10: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 2: size zooming

Page 11: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 3: Scanning

Page 12: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 3: Scanning

Page 13: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Property 4: Brain locus

Language centers

Visual centers

Page 14: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?
Page 15: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

What’s imagery like?

In many ways, it’s like perception

(but in some ways not)

Page 16: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Memory representations

Visual experience “screen”

Early perceptual processes

Page 17: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Perky (1910)

Confusability (Perky, 1910)

Page 18: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

People confused imagery and perception.

Like perception: Confusability (Perky, 1910)

Page 19: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Like perception: interference

High imagery: “A nudist devouring a bird”Low imagey: “The intellect of Einstein was a miracle”

Visual interfering task: subjects see a 1 or 2 on a computer screen & must say which digit not appear

Auditory interfering task: subjects hear a “1” or “2” and must say the other digit.

Control group: no task

Atwood, 1971

Page 20: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Atwood results

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

High Imagery Low Imagery

ControlVisualAuditory

visual interfering task = big effect on high imagery pairsauditory interfering task = big effect on low imagery pairs.

Page 21: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Visual

Spatial

Like perception: separation of “what” and “where”

Page 22: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

color questions (“what color is the outside of a pineapple?”

size comparisons (“which is bigger, a popsicle or a pack of cigarettes?”)

Letter rotationMental scanning

Visual imagery: Spatial Imagery

Damage to ventral impairs visual imagery, damage to dorsal impairs spatial imagery

Page 23: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery not like perception: distortions

• Which city is further North, Rome or Philadelphia?

• Which city is further East, Chicago, or Minneapolis?

• Which city is further South, Mexico City or Panama City?

• Which city is further west, Reno, or San Diego?

Page 24: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery not like perception: distortion

Page 25: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery not like perception: distortion

Reno

San Francisco

San Diego

65% of Bay Area students got it wrong

Page 26: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery not like perception: distortion

Reno

San Francisco

San Diego

Tilted figures tend to be remembered as more vertical or horizontal than they really are

Page 27: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery not like perception

Study this so that you could draw it.

Page 28: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagery not like perception

Before you draw it. . . Rotate it 90 degrees clockwise—can you tell what it is?

Now draw it.

Page 29: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?
Page 30: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Finke et al (1989)

Inspection allows you to determine what a visual image is.

Imagine the letter “B.” Rotate it 90 degrees counterclockwise. Put a triangle directly below it having the same width and pointing down. Remove the horizontal line. What is it?

Page 31: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Imagine the letter “B.” BRotate it 90 degrees counter clockwise.

B

Put a triangle directly below it having the same width and pointing down

B

Remove the horizontal line

People get the transformations right about 60% of the timeIf they get the transformations right, they name the image 60% of the time.

Page 32: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Image inspection

Images can be inspected to some extent, but it is not as effective as perception

Page 33: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

What is imagery for?

• Memory

• Make implicit knowledge conscious

• Prepare for future actions

Page 34: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Memory

Concrete

Con

cre

te

Abstract

Ab

stra

ctFirs

t W

ord

Second Word

trumpet- potato

democracy- tire

shell- intellect

miracle- justice

Page 35: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Dual coding model (Paivio)Abstract nouns: can be coded only verbally.Concrete nouns: can be coded verbally or in terms of images.

Page 36: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Does bizarreness help?

It seems to; data conflict a bit from study to study, but overall answer seems to be “yes.”

Page 37: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Make implicit knowledge conscious

We are a visual species, and it makes sense for memory to follow

perception.

What might be ways to code the world other than vision?

Page 38: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Make implicit knowledge conscious

• Is the writing on the Coca-Cola logo cursive?

• Which is closer to the ground, the tip of a horse’s tail, or the knee on it’s back leg?

• Which is larger, a tennis ball, or the rounded part of a light bulb?

This is information that was in the image, and so can be extracted, but was not encoded, per se.

Page 39: Visual Imagery. Visual imagery What is it? What’s it like? What’s it for?

Example--will the bed fit in the alcove?

Prepare for future actions