Recognition Memory for Briefly Presented Pictures: The Time Course of Rapid Forgetting

When viewing a rapid sequence of pictures, observers momentarily understand the gist of each scene but have poor recognition memory for most of them ( M. C. Potter, 1976 ). Is forgetting immediate, or does some information persist briefly? Sequences of 5 scenes were presented for 173 ms/picture; whe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance 2002-10, Vol.28 (5), p.1163-1175
Hauptverfasser: Potter, Mary C, Staub, Adrian, Rado, Janina, O'Connor, Daniel H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:When viewing a rapid sequence of pictures, observers momentarily understand the gist of each scene but have poor recognition memory for most of them ( M. C. Potter, 1976 ). Is forgetting immediate, or does some information persist briefly? Sequences of 5 scenes were presented for 173 ms/picture; when yes-no testing began immediately, recognition was initially high but declined markedly during the 10-item test. With testing delays of 2 or 6 s, the decline over testing was less steep. When 10 or 20 pictures were presented, there was again a marked initial decline during testing. A 2-alternative forced-choice recognition test produced similar results. Both the passage of time and test interference (but not presentation interference) led to forgetting. The brief persistence of information may assist in building a coherent representation over several fixations.
ISSN:0096-1523
1939-1277
DOI:10.1037/0096-1523.28.5.1163