Title: Imagery
1Imagery
- Visual perception allows us to inspect, reach
for, manipulate objects and navigate around them. - Visual imagery is analogous to perception in that
it can be used to represent and process
information about objects, in the mind. - There is a connection, but they are not the same.
- Mental tasks, thinking, are undertaken in
Imagery. (see the R test)
2Imagery
Which of these figures are correct?
3Ancient history
- The earliest written languages were in the form
of pictorial symbols. - Many philosophers from Aristotle through
Descartes and Locke assumed that picture-like
images were an essential part of human thought
.Thagard - Greek orators used imagery-based mnemonic devices
to help them remember the sequence of events when
reciting long oral traditions. Anderson - Plato likened memory representations to
impressions on a wax tablet thereby becoming one
of the first to distinguish between the
representations and the medium in which they
occur. Pylyshyn, 1981
4More recently
- 1880s Sir Francis Galton provided the first
psychological documentation that individuals vary
greatly in the vividness of their visual imagery. - 1889-1913 Psychologists focused on the study of
Imagery, but their techniques were so flawed that
by - 1920 with the rise of Behaviorism, the
experimental study of the mind fell into abeyance.
51960s
- Interest in mental imagery was revived when Alan
Paivio 1986 started a program of study of the
facilitating effects of imagery-related variables
on the performance of memory. - He formulated a dual-coding theory about the
representation of knowledge in memory a verbal
system specialised for processing verbal
materials,logogens, and a non-verbal one, for
objects and events, with imagens.
6The study of Imagery.
- Mental images are subjective thus developing a
cognitive understanding of Imagery has been
fraught with difficulties. - There are visual, auditory, motor, gustatory,
olfactory images. This discussion is confined to
visual images. - Researchers have been forced to develop
experimental procedures that allow them to make
inferences from behavior and neuro-physical
states.
7Some questions to be answered in a Theory of
Imagery
- How are mental representations processed and
transformed? - What is the structure/nature of mental images?
Are they pictorial or not? - What is the relationship between imagery and
perception? - How do we account for individual differences in
imagery ability?
8The pictorialists, many of whom are
neuro-scientists
- Believe that picture-like displays are generated
on the surface of the visual cortex during
imaging. - Have taken a Bottom-up approach to research on
Imagery. - Research in different paradigms to understand
mental organization and investigate manipulation
of representations. -
9Martha Farah et al 1992 in studies on brain
damaged patients found that
- A person who developed tunnel vision after
unilateral occipital lobocectomy also developed
tunnel imagery. - One patient who had disassociation of recognition
abilities and spatial relations could not
identify a known object, but could manipulate it
another could identify, but not process spatial
relationships. - Eduardo Bisiach et al found that patients with
unilateral visual neglect also suffered from
comparable neglect in imagery.
10Shepherd and Podogorny Anderson
- They reported that perceptual and imaging
versions of the same task yielded the same
pattern of results. - Their studies included an exercise about whether
a presented dot fell on a target block letter.
11Tversky 1991
- People can transform an initial image by gradual
means by letting it fade then bringing up the
transformed image. - Or they may blink and start again as this
requires less effort. - Imagery is likely to be used in fact retrieval if
the fact is about a visual property that a person
has seen and it has not been considered
frequently in the past.
12Holly and Taylor studies
- Subjects given route or survey text descriptions,
with landmarks, of an area, were asked
verification questions. - There was no significant difference between
responses for route and survey subjects. - When these subjects were asked to draw a map,
they remembered the landmarks in order of mention
in the text. - Findings were that subjects appeared to mentally
move through a sort of 3-D model of space which
has no perspective. These findings differ from
the classic work on imagery which is
perception-like and from a particular point of
view.
13Spatial Frameworks Tversky, 1991
- Studies done where the subject images himself at
the top of an escalator and is given information
about spaces around him. It was found that rather
than turning around, people construct spatial
frameworks (scaffolding) - with most rapid access
to information in front and up and down, then on
left and right.
14Kosslyns 1994 theory has gained general
acceptance.
- Visual images are depictive representations that
can be manipulated, interpreted and
re-interpreted so that people can extract novel
information about object properties.
15Kosslyn parts of the brain used in visual
perception are also involved in visual mental
imagery.
- Using Positron Emission Tomography (PET) it was
demonstrated that the primary visual cortex is
activated when people image objects with their
eyes closed. - The pathway from the primary visual cortex to
- the parietal lobe (upper back part) processes
object properties such as shape, color and
texture. - the temporal lobe (back part) processes spatial
properties needed for manipulation or navigation
such as size location and orientation of objects.
16Kosslyn cont.
- Imagery is high level visual perception- it
incorporates the use of knowledge about objects
and events and top-down hypothesis-testing
mechanisms to recognize objects under varying
conditions.
17Percepts and images are patterns of activity in
a visual buffer, a topographically-mapped area in
the primary visual cortex. Kosslyn
Image inspection carried out with processes used
to encode and interpret perceptions
The visual buffer is in the primary visual
cortex. The pattern of activity is transient.
Visual buffer
Associative memory stores visual images. Must be
re-activated continuously to maintain images
Attentional subsystems-draw images in buffer
18Logies model of visuo-spatial working memory
Central executive Where conscious images are
generated and manipulated
Spatial info in temporary storage
Visual info in temporary storage
Visual info in long term memory
Spatial info in long term memory
The inner scribe who manipulates the storage
19Images are epiphenomenal.Pylyshyn 1970 to
the present
- Reasoning with mental images involves the same
form of representations and the same processes as
that of reasoning in general. - However, the content or subject matter of
thoughts experienced as images includes
information about how the things would look. - Images, though real, are epiphenomenal and do not
serve any useful function.
20John Anderson late 1970s
- Neither theoretical structures nor processes can
be firmly anchored by behavioral data alone, thus
any depictive theory can be reformulated as a
propositional one. - (propositional statement in language or symbols)
21Bibliography
- Kosslyn, S.M. 1981. The medium and the message in
mental imagery a theory. Psychological Review
88. 46-66. - Thagard, Paul. 2000. Mind. Introduction to
Cognitive Science. 3ed. MIT Press. - Tversky, B. 1991. Spatial mental models. In G.H.
Bower (ed) The Psychology of Learning and
Motivation 27. N.Y. Academic Press. 109-145 - Bechtel, W and George Graham (eds) 1998. A
Companion to Cognitive Science. Mass., Blackwell
Publishers