Intraub H
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 1984 Jan;10(1):115-25. doi: 10.1037//0278-7393.10.1.115.
Three experiments studied the effects of voluntary and involuntary focus of attention on recognition memory for pictures. Experiments 1 and 3 tested the conceptual-masking hypothesis, which holds that a visual event will automatically disrupt processing of a previously glimpsed picture if that event is new and meaningful. Memory for 112-ms pictures was tested under conditions where the to-be-ignored 1.5-s interstimulus interval contained a blank field; a repeating picture; a new picture; a new, nonsense picture; or a new, inverted picture each time. The blank field, repeating picture, and new, nonsense picture did not disrupt memory as much as a new, meaningful picture, supporting the conceptual-masking hypothesis. Experiment 2 studied voluntary attentional control of encoding by instructing subjects to focus attention on the brief pictures, all pictures, or the long pictures in a sequence. Recognition memory for pictures of both durations showed a striking ability of observers to process pictures selectively. The possible role of these effects in visual scanning are discussed.
三项实验研究了注意力的自愿和非自愿聚焦对图片识别记忆的影响。实验1和3检验了概念性掩蔽假说,该假说认为,如果一个视觉事件是新的且有意义的,那么它将自动干扰对之前瞥见图片的处理。在每次待忽略的1.5秒刺激间隔包含空白场、重复图片、新图片、新的无意义图片或新的倒置图片的条件下,对112毫秒的图片的记忆进行了测试。空白场、重复图片和新的无意义图片对记忆的干扰不如新的有意义图片大,这支持了概念性掩蔽假说。实验2通过指示受试者将注意力集中在序列中的简短图片、所有图片或长图片上,研究了编码过程中的自愿注意力控制。对两种时长图片的识别记忆都显示出观察者有惊人的选择性处理图片的能力。讨论了这些效应在视觉扫描中的可能作用。