Literature DB >> 21702846

Pictures and spoken descriptions elicit similar eye movements during mental imagery, both in light and in complete darkness.

Roger Johansson1, Jana Holsanova, Kenneth Holmqvist.   

Abstract

This study provides evidence that eye movements reflect the positions of objects while participants listen to a spoken description, retell a previously heard spoken description, and describe a previously seen picture. This effect is equally strong in retelling from memory, irrespective of whether the original elicitation was spoken or visual. In addition, this effect occurs both while watching a blank white board and while sitting in complete darkness. This study includes 4 experiments. The first 2 experiments measured eye movements of participants looking at a blank white board. Experiment 1 monitors eye movements of participants on 2 occasions: first, when participants listened to a prerecorded spoken scene description; second, when participants were later retelling it from memory. Experiment 2 first monitored eye movements of participants as they studied a complex picture visually, and then later as they described it from memory. The second pair of experiments (Experiments 3 and 4) replicated Experiments 1 and 2 with the only difference being that they were executed in complete darkness. This method of analysis differentiated between eye movements that are categorically correct relative to the positions of the whole eye gaze pattern (global correspondence) and eye movements that are only locally correct (local correspondence). The discussion relates the findings to the current debate on mental imagery. 2006 Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.

Entities:  

Year:  2006        PMID: 21702846     DOI: 10.1207/s15516709cog0000_86

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Sci        ISSN: 0364-0213


  28 in total

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Authors:  Matthias Hartmann; Fred W Mast; Martin H Fischer
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2015-11-25

2.  Watching diagnoses develop: Eye movements reveal symptom processing during diagnostic reasoning.

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3.  Gesturing during mental problem solving reduces eye movements, especially for individuals with lower visual working memory capacity.

Authors:  Wim T J L Pouw; Myrto-Foteini Mavilidi; Tamara van Gog; Fred Paas
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2016-03-19

4.  Time in the eye of the beholder: Gaze position reveals spatial-temporal associations during encoding and memory retrieval of future and past.

Authors:  Corinna S Martarelli; Fred W Mast; Matthias Hartmann
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5.  Using space to represent categories: insights from gaze position.

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Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2016-06-15

6.  Eye movements during long-term pictorial recall.

Authors:  Corinna S Martarelli; Fred W Mast
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2012-05-19

7.  Listen up, eye movements play a role in verbal memory retrieval.

Authors:  Agnes Scholz; Katja Mehlhorn; Josef F Krems
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2014-12-20

8.  Impact of optokinetic stimulation on mental arithmetic.

Authors:  Nicolas Masson; Mauro Pesenti; Valérie Dormal
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2016-06-24

9.  Covert shifts of attention can account for the functional role of "eye movements to nothing".

Authors:  Agnes Scholz; Anja Klichowicz; Josef F Krems
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2018-02

10.  When looking back to nothing goes back to nothing.

Authors:  Andrea L Wantz; Corinna S Martarelli; Fred W Mast
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2015-11-09
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