Department of Psychology.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2020 Mar;149(3):530-549. doi: 10.1037/xge0000664. Epub 2019 Aug 15.
People can store thousands of real-world objects in visual long-term memory with high precision. But are these objects stored as unitary, bound entities, as often assumed, or as bundles of separable features? We tested this in several experiments. In the first series of studies, participants were instructed to remember specific exemplars of real-world objects presented in a particular state (e.g., open/closed, full/empty, etc.), and then were asked to recognize either which exemplars they had seen (e.g., I saw this coffee mug), or which exemplar-state conjunctions they had seen (e.g., I saw this coffee mug and it was full). Participants had a large number of within-category confusions, for example misremembering which states went with which exemplars, while simultaneously showing strong memory for the features themselves (e.g., which states they had seen, which exemplars they had seen). In a second series of studies, we found further evidence of independence: participants were very good at remembering which exemplars they had seen independently of whether these items were presented in a new or old state, but the same did not occur for features known to be truly holistically represented. Thus, we find through 2 lines of evidence that the features of real-world objects that support exemplar discrimination and state discrimination are not bound, suggesting visual objects are not inherently unitary entities in memory. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
人们可以在视觉长期记忆中以高精度存储数千个真实世界的物体。但是,这些物体是否像通常假设的那样,作为单一的、有界的实体存储,还是作为可分离特征的捆绑存储?我们在几个实验中对此进行了测试。在第一个系列的研究中,参与者被指示记住特定的真实物体样本,这些样本呈现特定的状态(例如,打开/关闭、满/空等),然后要求他们识别他们所看到的样本(例如,我看到了这个咖啡杯),或者他们所看到的样本-状态结合(例如,我看到了这个咖啡杯,它是满的)。参与者有大量的类别内混淆,例如错误地记住了哪些状态与哪些样本相对应,同时对特征本身表现出强烈的记忆(例如,他们看到了哪些状态,他们看到了哪些样本)。在第二个系列的研究中,我们发现了进一步的独立性证据:参与者非常善于记住他们所看到的样本,而不考虑这些项目是呈现新状态还是旧状态,但对于那些被认为是真正整体表示的特征,则不会发生这种情况。因此,我们通过 2 条证据发现,支持样本区分和状态区分的真实物体的特征不是绑定的,这表明视觉物体在记忆中不是固有的单一实体。(PsycINFO 数据库记录(c)2020 APA,保留所有权利)。