Ratner C, McCarthy J
Department of Psychology, Humboldt State University, Arcata, California 95521-4957.
J Gen Psychol. 1990 Oct;117(4):369-77. doi: 10.1080/00221309.1990.9921143.
Ecologically relevant stimuli were developed as an alternative to Munsell color chips. Colored pictures of familiar objects were used to study color memory. We investigated the typicality of color to particular objects. Contextually typical colors were remembered more accurately than atypical colors were. Moreover, this variable had a stronger effect on memory than focality did. We concluded that memory for ecologically relevant material is more impressed by a color's relation to experience than by its intrinsic properties.