| Literature DB >> 30931420 |
Katrina Ferrara1, Sarah Furlong1, Soojin Park1,2, Barbara Landau1.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that adults are able to remember more than 1,000 images with great detail. However, little is known about the development of this visual capacity, nor its presence early in life. This study tests the level of detail of young children's memory for a large number of items, adapting the method of Brady, Konkle, Alvarez, and Oliva (2008). Four- and six-year-old children were shown more than 100 images of everyday objects. They were then tested for recognition of familiar items in a binary decision task. The identity of the foil test item was manipulated in three conditions (Category, Exemplar, and State). Children demonstrated high accuracy across all conditions, remembering not only the basic-level category (Category), but also unique details (Exemplar), and information about position and arrangement of parts (State). These findings demonstrate that children spontaneously encode a high degree of visual detail. Early in life, visual memory exhibits high fidelity and extends over a large set of items.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive development; memory capacity; memory fidelity; object recognition; visual memory
Year: 2017 PMID: 30931420 PMCID: PMC6436559 DOI: 10.1162/OPMI_a_00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Mind (Camb) ISSN: 2470-2986
Figure 1.Nine example test pairs presented during the two-alternative forced-choice task for the three conditions (Category, Exemplar, and State). There were 50 test pairs per condition. The complete stimulus set is available at http://parklab.johnshopkins.edu/IMAGE_SETS_2.html.
Figure 2.Percent correct in the Category, Exemplar, and State conditions for 4-year-olds and 6-year-olds. Error bars reflect one standard error of the mean (SE). Chance performance (50%) is indicated by the dashed line.