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Memory for descriptive and spatial information in complex pictures

Studied memory for several kinds of information in complex pictures, using 24 undergraduates. Stimuli were line drawings of either real-world scenes or unorganized collections of objects. Memory was tested by recognition and reconstruction tests, given immediately and/or after a week. Organization o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Experimental Psychology : Human Learning and Memory 1976-01, Vol.2 (1), p.38-48
Main Authors: Mandler, Jean M, Parker, Richard E
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Studied memory for several kinds of information in complex pictures, using 24 undergraduates. Stimuli were line drawings of either real-world scenes or unorganized collections of objects. Memory was tested by recognition and reconstruction tests, given immediately and/or after a week. Organization of the pictures had little effect on memory for size, orientation, or physical appearance of objects in the pictures. There was only a small loss of these types of descriptive information over a week's time. Organization of the pictures had a major effect on memory for location of objects in the pictures. Memory for location on the horizontal dimension declined markedly for both types of pictures over a week. Performance remained high on the vertical dimension for organized pictures, and systematic distortion occurred on this dimension for unorganized pictures. Reconstruction data were compared with the performance of Ss who had not seen the pictures before. It is concluded that real-world schemata do not affect encoding of some types of descriptive information but play an important role in both encoding and memory for spatial information.
ISSN:0096-1515
0278-7393
2327-9745
1939-1285
DOI:10.1037/0278-7393.2.1.38