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Tell me what you saw: The usefulness of verbal descriptions for others

Describing what one saw to another person is common in everyday experience, such as spatial navigation and crime investigations. Past studies have examined the effects of recounting on one’s own memory, neglecting an important function of memory recall in social communication. Here we report surpris...

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Published in:Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) 2020-08, Vol.73 (8), p.1227-1241
Main Authors: Tan, Deborah H, Jiang, Yuhong V
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Jiang, Yuhong V
description Describing what one saw to another person is common in everyday experience, such as spatial navigation and crime investigations. Past studies have examined the effects of recounting on one’s own memory, neglecting an important function of memory recall in social communication. Here we report surprisingly low utility of one’s verbal descriptions for others, even when visual memory for the stimuli has high capacity. Participants described photographs of common objects they had seen to enable judges to identify the target object from a foil in the same basic-level category. When describing from perception, participants were able to provide useful descriptions, allowing judges to accurately identify the target objects 87% of the time. Judges’ accuracy decreased to just 57% when participants provided descriptions from memory acquired minutes ago, and to near chance (51.8%) when the verbal descriptions were based on memory acquired 24 hours ago. Comparison of participants’ own identification accuracy with judges’ accuracy suggests the presence of a common source of errors. This finding suggests that recall and recognition of visual objects share common memory sources. In addition, the low utility of one’s verbal descriptions constrains theories about the extension of one’s memory to the external world and has implications for eyewitness identification and laws governing it.
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subjects Accuracy
Adult
Female
Form Perception - physiology
Humans
Male
Mental Recall - physiology
Narration
Recognition, Psychology - physiology
Verbal Behavior - physiology
Visual Perception - physiology
Young Adult
title Tell me what you saw: The usefulness of verbal descriptions for others
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