| Literature DB >> 24714568 |
Michaela Porubanova1, Daniel Joel Shaw2, Ryan McKay3, Dimitris Xygalatas4.
Abstract
Previous research has shown that ideas which violate our expectations, such as schema-inconsistent concepts, enjoy privileged status in terms of memorability. In our study, memory for concepts that violate cultural (cultural schema-level) expectations (e.g., "illiterate teacher", "wooden bottle", or "thorny grass") versus domain-level (ontological) expectations (e.g., "speaking cat", "jumping maple", or "melting teacher") was examined. Concepts that violate cultural expectations, or counter-schematic, were remembered to a greater extent compared with concepts that violate ontological expectations and with intuitive concepts (e.g., "galloping pony", "drying orchid", or "convertible car"), in both immediate recall, and delayed recognition tests. Importantly, concepts related to agents showed a memory advantage over concepts not pertaining to agents, but this was true only for expectation-violating concepts. Our results imply that intuitive, everyday concepts are equally attractive and memorable regardless of the presence or absence of agents. However, concepts that violate our expectations (cultural-schema or domain-level) are more memorable when pertaining to agents (humans and animals) than to non-agents (plants or objects/artifacts). We conclude that due to their evolutionary salience, cultural ideas which combine expectancy violations and the involvement of an agent are especially memorable and thus have an enhanced probability of being successfully propagated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24714568 PMCID: PMC3979650 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Individual concepts pertaining to cultural schema-level violations, ontological violations, or intuitive ideas.
| Concept Category | |||
| Ontological Category | CUL | ONT | INT |
|
| Atheist priest | Flying waiter | Classy artist |
| Blind driver | Liquid butcher | Honest writer | |
| Illiterate teacher | Melting teacher | Salivating runner | |
| Puritan whore | Transparent pilot | Smart chemist | |
|
| Carnivorous sheep | Democratic skunk | Drinking dog |
| Coward tiger | Evaporating rabbit | Galloping pony | |
| Domestic bear | Speaking cat | Obedient horse | |
| Herbivorous hyena | Swearing koala | Tame zebra | |
|
| Salty banana | Barking grape | Drying orchid |
| Soft cactus | Jumping maple | Green hedge | |
| Stinky rose | Racing tulip | Growing pine | |
| Thorny grass | Vomiting birch | Planted onion | |
|
| Spherical room | Hungry kettle | Brown fence |
| Stone mirror | Stalking table | Convertible car | |
| Triangle plate | Talking train | Green pencil | |
| Wooden bottle | Worried chair | Plastic clock | |
Figure 1Mean recall in terms of concept category and presence of agents.
Participants recalled significantly more agents involving concepts in cultural schema-level and domain-level breaches condition, however this was not true for intuitive concepts (without breaches). The figure represents data averaged for immediate Recall 1 and immediate Recall 2. Error bars represent standard errors.
Means (standard error of means) for recall of individual concepts based on the presence of agents.
| Recall 1 | Recall 2 | Delayed Recognition | |
|
| |||
|
| 1.49 (0.15) | 2.05 (0.15) | 4.94 (0.27) |
|
| 1.04 (0.11) | 1.58 (0.12) | 3.29 (0.25) |
|
| |||
|
| 0.72 (0.10) | 1.20 (0.12) | 3.71 (0.26) |
|
| 0.60 (0.08) | 0.70 (0.09) | 3.00 (0.26) |
|
| |||
|
| 0.72 (0.09) | 1.26 (0.10) | 3.01 (0.22) |
|
| 0.74 (0.08) | 1.39 (0.12) | 2.54 (0.23) |
Note. N = 75 (Recall 1, Recall 2), N = 72 (Delayed recognition).
Figure 2Surprise delayed recognition performance in terms of concept category and agent presence.
Participants recalled significantly more agents-involving concepts in cultural schema-level and domain-level breaches condition; however this was not true for intuitive concepts (without breaches). Error bars represent standard errors.