Literature DB >> 1933672

Neither pictures nor propositions: what can we learn from a mental image?

D Reisberg1, D Chambers.   

Abstract

In an earlier paper, we reported that subjects have great difficulty in finding alternative construals of their own mental images. In the present paper, we examine how subjects can nonetheless learn from their mental images. We argue that mental images, like percepts, are meaningful depictions. As such, mental images do depict appearance but are also inherently understood in a certain way, and this understanding influences the phenomenal appearance of the represented form. This, in turn, governs what the form will be seen to resemble and what the form is likely to call from memory. We report four experiments in support of this view. In each experiment, subjects are briefly shown outline shapes and asked to form a mental image of each shape. Subjects are then asked what familiar form the imaged shape resembles. Subjects routinely find target shapes in their images when the target is compatible both with the imaged geometry and with how that geometry is organized and understood. When the sought-for target is compatible with image geometry but not with how the image is understood, subjects reliably fail to find the target shape in their images.

Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 1933672     DOI: 10.1037/h0084297

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Psychol        ISSN: 0008-4255


  6 in total

1.  Squinting with the mind's eye: effects of stimulus resolution on imaginal and perceptual comparisons.

Authors:  S M Kosslyn; K E Sukel; B M Bly
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1999-03

2.  Mental images can be ambiguous: reconstruals and reference-frame reversals.

Authors:  M A Peterson; J F Kihlstrom; P M Rose; M L Glisky
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1992-03

3.  Visual discovery in mind and on paper.

Authors:  R E Anderson; T Helstrup
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1993-05

4.  Mental image reversal and verbal recoding: when ducks become rabbits.

Authors:  M A Brandimonte; W Gerbino
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1993-01

5.  Inspecting visual mental images: can people "see" implicit properties as easily in imagery and perception?

Authors:  William L Thompson; Stephen M Kosslyn; Michael S Hoffman; Katinka Van der Kooij
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2008-07

Review 6.  Assessing mental imagery in clinical psychology: a review of imagery measures and a guiding framework.

Authors:  David G Pearson; Catherine Deeprose; Sophie M A Wallace-Hadrill; Stephanie Burnett Heyes; Emily A Holmes
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2012-09-11
  6 in total

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