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Memory for pictures and words - perceptual and semantic factors in the picture superiority effect

Stenberg, Georg LU (2002) Binding in human memory - a neurocognitive approach
Abstract
Memory for pictures and words - perceptual and semantic factors in the picture superiority effect Georg Stenberg, Växjö University, Sweden Memory for pictures is known to surpass memory for corresponding concrete words, an effect often attributed to the more distinctive perceptual form of pictures. A consequence of this view is that picture superiority would not survive a transformation in which only semantic, not perceptual, features were preserved from study to test, such as studying a picture of a horse and recognising the word "horse". In the present experiments, either pictures or Swedish words were studied. Recognition tests were performed with items in either their original form or translated into English words. (Participants were... (More)
Memory for pictures and words - perceptual and semantic factors in the picture superiority effect Georg Stenberg, Växjö University, Sweden Memory for pictures is known to surpass memory for corresponding concrete words, an effect often attributed to the more distinctive perceptual form of pictures. A consequence of this view is that picture superiority would not survive a transformation in which only semantic, not perceptual, features were preserved from study to test, such as studying a picture of a horse and recognising the word "horse". In the present experiments, either pictures or Swedish words were studied. Recognition tests were performed with items in either their original form or translated into English words. (Participants were Swedish students with adequate command of English.) Across three experiments that varied processing depth of the orienting task, the advantage for items studied as pictures was preserved in English-language recognition. Further, a multinomial model with separate parameters for form-based and semantically based recognition was fitted to the data. Results showed (1) that encoding of both semantic and perceptual features was more effective for pictures than for words and (2) that encoding of pictures was less affected by orienting task than encoding of words. The results suggest that pick-up of both semantic and perceptual features is more automatic and efficient for pictures than for words. (Less)
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author
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Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Binding in human memory - a neurocognitive approach
conference name
Binding in human memory - a neurocognitive approach
conference location
Saarland, Germany
conference dates
2002-05-15 - 2002-05-18
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3c272ef3-6fd4-4f55-85a2-b2b668ca0512 (old id 1124699)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:35:47
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:15:01
@inproceedings{3c272ef3-6fd4-4f55-85a2-b2b668ca0512,
  abstract     = {{Memory for pictures and words - perceptual and semantic factors in the picture superiority effect Georg Stenberg, Växjö University, Sweden Memory for pictures is known to surpass memory for corresponding concrete words, an effect often attributed to the more distinctive perceptual form of pictures. A consequence of this view is that picture superiority would not survive a transformation in which only semantic, not perceptual, features were preserved from study to test, such as studying a picture of a horse and recognising the word "horse". In the present experiments, either pictures or Swedish words were studied. Recognition tests were performed with items in either their original form or translated into English words. (Participants were Swedish students with adequate command of English.) Across three experiments that varied processing depth of the orienting task, the advantage for items studied as pictures was preserved in English-language recognition. Further, a multinomial model with separate parameters for form-based and semantically based recognition was fitted to the data. Results showed (1) that encoding of both semantic and perceptual features was more effective for pictures than for words and (2) that encoding of pictures was less affected by orienting task than encoding of words. The results suggest that pick-up of both semantic and perceptual features is more automatic and efficient for pictures than for words.}},
  author       = {{Stenberg, Georg}},
  booktitle    = {{Binding in human memory - a neurocognitive approach}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Memory for pictures and words - perceptual and semantic factors in the picture superiority effect}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}