Lecture 9: Visuospatial Flashcards

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1
Q

Shepard Study

A
  • Presented people with 612 pictures for 6 seconds each, then asked people which pictures had they seen before
  • People still remembered over 87% of the picture a week later
  • Memory was much worse for words
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2
Q

Standing Study

A
  • Used 2560 vacation pictures
    • Subjects remembered 85%-95% of images
  • He then went up to 10,000 pictures for 5 seconds each (took 5 days)
    - Remembered 6600 on the 5th day
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3
Q

Exceptions to good visual memory

A
  • Visual memory is poor for unimportant or unattended details
  • Poor when stimuli lack meaning
  • Poor when distractors (foils) are similar
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4
Q

Good recognition involves

A
  • Attention to details
  • Meaningfulness and relevance of details
  • Distinctive alternates
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5
Q

Richer Code Hypothesis

A
  • Visual code has more information so memory is better
  • Was disproven by people recognizing photos, line drawings, and embellished line drawings at the same rate, and text description was worse
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5
Q

Cognitive Map

A

Map in the mind of a physical space and the objects contained in that space

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6
Q

Dual Code Hypothesis

A
  • Represent stimuli using multiples codes, i.e. an image and a word. This leads to better memory because of the dual code
  • Evidence: Concrete words like apple and car are remembered better in a list than abstract words like virtue and peace
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7
Q

Tolman’s Rat Maze Study

A
  • Rats learned where the food was in a maze with no need for exploring after a while
  • Created a new maze with many different openings, rather than one turning pathway
  • Rats went to where the food was in space
  • Showed that the rats did not memorize turns, but rather knew where the food was in space
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8
Q

Jonides and Baum Experiment

A

Had people judge distances between different Ann Arbor landmarks and people did well

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8
Q

Heuristics

A

Mental shortcuts that allow people to make fast decisions

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9
Q

Right-Angle Bias

A

We tend to imagine things as having right angles

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10
Q

Symmetry Heuristic

A

We tend to imagine things as being symmetric

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11
Q

Alignment Heuristic

A

We tend to imagine things as in alignment with each other

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12
Q

Rotation Heuristics

A

We tend to rotate things to have them be vertical or horizontal

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13
Q

Relative Position Heuristic

A

We tend to imagine things according to their relative positions, i.e. most in Canada is north of most of America, so we assume Seattle is south of Montreal

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14
Q

Subjective Clusters

A

Conceptual knowledge affects representations of distances
Ex. two coffeeshops are thought of to be closer together than a coffeeshop and barbershop