Loftus G R
J Exp Psychol Hum Learn. 1981 Sep;7(5):369-76.
In three picture recognition experiments, complex pictures were presented during a study phase, each presentation consisting of n sequential masked presentations and each presentation lasting d msec. This procedure was designed to mimic a series of eye fixations over a picture, but with number and duration of fixations under experimental control. With n held constant, subsequent recognition memory performance increased with increasing d up to 400 msec. With d held constant, performance increased with increasing n only to the degree that an additional presentation of a picture was used to fixate a novel portion of the picture. These results, and those of Loftus's 1972 experiment, suggest a model of picture encoding that incorporates the following propositions: (a) A normal fixation on a picture is designed to encode some feature of the picture. (b) The duration of fixation is determined by the amount of time required to carry out the intended feature encoding. (c) The more features are encoded from a picture, the better the recognition memory will be form the picture. Additionally, the results of the present experiments imply that the events that constitute encoding within a fixation proceed in a fixed, relatively immutable order.
在三项图片识别实验中,在研究阶段呈现复杂图片,每次呈现由n次连续的掩蔽呈现组成,每次呈现持续d毫秒。此程序旨在模拟对图片的一系列眼动注视,但注视的次数和持续时间处于实验控制之下。当n保持恒定时,随后的识别记忆表现随着d增加到400毫秒而提高。当d保持恒定时,表现仅在使用图片的额外呈现来注视图片的新部分的程度上随着n的增加而提高。这些结果以及洛夫特斯1972年实验的结果,提出了一种图片编码模型,该模型包含以下命题:(a) 对图片的正常注视旨在编码图片的某些特征。(b) 注视持续时间由执行预期特征编码所需的时间量决定。(c) 从图片中编码的特征越多,对该图片的识别记忆就越好。此外,本实验的结果意味着在一次注视内构成编码的事件以固定的、相对不变的顺序进行。