Eye movements during the recollection of text information reflect content rather than the text itself
(2015) European Conference on Eye Movements, ECEM, 2015 p.67-67- Abstract
- Several studies have reported that spontaneous eye movements occur when visuospatial information is recalled from memory. Such gazes closely reflect the content and spatial relations from the original scene layout (e.g., Johansson et al., 2012). However, when someone has originally read a scene description, the memory of the physical layout of the text itself might compete with the memory of the spatial arrangement of the described scene. The present study was designed to address this fundamental issue by having participants read
scene descriptions that where manipulated to be either congruent or incongruent with the spatial layout of the text itself. 28 participants read and recalled three texts: (1) a scene description congruent with... (More) - Several studies have reported that spontaneous eye movements occur when visuospatial information is recalled from memory. Such gazes closely reflect the content and spatial relations from the original scene layout (e.g., Johansson et al., 2012). However, when someone has originally read a scene description, the memory of the physical layout of the text itself might compete with the memory of the spatial arrangement of the described scene. The present study was designed to address this fundamental issue by having participants read
scene descriptions that where manipulated to be either congruent or incongruent with the spatial layout of the text itself. 28 participants read and recalled three texts: (1) a scene description congruent with the spatial layout of the text; (2) a scene description incongruent with the spatial layout of the text; and (3) a control text without any spatial scene content. Recollection was performed orally while gazing at a blank screen. Results demonstrate that participant’s gaze patterns during recall more closely reflect the spatial layout of the scene than the physical locations of the text. Memory data provide evidence that mental models representing either the situation or the text do not necessarily compete but rather supplement each other (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/0e4f10ee-fdbe-4785-8233-88def2355db8
- author
- Traub, Franziska ; Johansson, Roger LU and Holmqvist, Kenneth LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2015-08-15
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- eye movements, memory retrieval, situation models, mental models, reading, spatial cognition
- pages
- 67 - 67
- conference name
- European Conference on Eye Movements, ECEM, 2015
- conference location
- Vienna, Austria
- conference dates
- 2015-08-16 - 2015-08-21
- project
- Culture, brain, learning: a Wallenberg Network Initiative
- Thinking in Time: Cognition, Communication and Learning
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 0e4f10ee-fdbe-4785-8233-88def2355db8
- alternative location
- http://ecem2015.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/k_ecem2015/proceedings/ECEM2015_Abstracts_150821.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2016-08-17 11:46:36
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:25:14
@misc{0e4f10ee-fdbe-4785-8233-88def2355db8, abstract = {{Several studies have reported that spontaneous eye movements occur when visuospatial information is recalled from memory. Such gazes closely reflect the content and spatial relations from the original scene layout (e.g., Johansson et al., 2012). However, when someone has originally read a scene description, the memory of the physical layout of the text itself might compete with the memory of the spatial arrangement of the described scene. The present study was designed to address this fundamental issue by having participants read<br/>scene descriptions that where manipulated to be either congruent or incongruent with the spatial layout of the text itself. 28 participants read and recalled three texts: (1) a scene description congruent with the spatial layout of the text; (2) a scene description incongruent with the spatial layout of the text; and (3) a control text without any spatial scene content. Recollection was performed orally while gazing at a blank screen. Results demonstrate that participant’s gaze patterns during recall more closely reflect the spatial layout of the scene than the physical locations of the text. Memory data provide evidence that mental models representing either the situation or the text do not necessarily compete but rather supplement each other}}, author = {{Traub, Franziska and Johansson, Roger and Holmqvist, Kenneth}}, keywords = {{eye movements; memory retrieval; situation models; mental models; reading; spatial cognition}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{08}}, pages = {{67--67}}, title = {{Eye movements during the recollection of text information reflect content rather than the text itself}}, url = {{http://ecem2015.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/k_ecem2015/proceedings/ECEM2015_Abstracts_150821.pdf}}, year = {{2015}}, }