Title: Visual images
1Visual images
- Recall Baddeleys model
- visuo-spatial sketchpad, phonological loop,
central executive system - early work by Paivio showed that one of the best
predictors of memory performance was how readily
the word was reported to be imaged
2Visual images
- How is visual information represented?
- Analogue versus digital debate
- mode of representation is continuous
- mode of representation is propositional
- Shepard Metzler (1971) p. 197 Reed
- presented a pair of 2-dimensional representations
of 3-dimensional objects - task judge whether objects were identical or not
3Visual images
- Shepard Metzler (1971) p. 197 Reed
- Results the mean RT increased linearly with the
degree of angular rotation between the pair of
objects - suggests that participants mentally rotated one
shape until it was at the same angle as the other - Kosslyn
- performed a series of studies in which subjects
were presented a series of pictures. Picture was
removed, and then subjects were required to make
judgements about it
4Visual images
- Kosslyn (contd)
- Results RT was a function of distance between
components of image (e.g., bow of boat vs rudder
takes longer than bow of boat vs porthole - geographical (landmarks) show a similar effect
e.g., distance between parts of campus - scaling effect
- imagine rabbit beside elephant rabbit beside
mouse - then answer question about rabbits eye
- Results faster RT with mouse than elephant
5Visual images
- Is imaging like seeing?
- Kosslyn and Shepard propose that these results
support that hypothesis - problems with data
- demand characteristics Pylyshyn argues that
people are simulating operation of perceptual
system - e.g., Intons-Peterson Roskos-Ewoldsen (1988)
- imagine you are walking with cannonball vs
balloon RT cannonball gt RT balloon
6Visual images
- Brooks (1967) demonstration
- I am going to show you a 4 x 4 matrix, denoting
one of the squares as a starting square - I am then going to say aloud a number of
sentences one at a time. I want you to try and
remember these sentences as well as you can
because I am going to test your memory for this
material
7Brooks (1967)
8Brooks (1967)
- in the starting square put a 1
- in the next square to the right put a 2
- in the next square up put a 3
- in the next square to the right put a 4
- in the next square down put a 5
- in the next square down put a 6
- in the next square to the left put a 7
- in the next square down put an 8
- in the next square to the left put a 9
- in the next square to the left put a 10
9Brooks (1967)
- Recall as many of the sentences as you can
10Brooks (1967)
11Brooks 1967
- In the starting square put a 1
- in the next square to the slow put a 2
- in the next square to the good put a 3
- in the next square to the good put a 4
- in the next square to the slow put a 5
- in the next square to the bad put a 6
- in the next square to the slow put a 7
- in the next square to the bad put a 8
- in the next square to the quick put a 9
- in the next square to the bad put a 10
12Brooks 1967
- Recall as many sentences as you can
13Brooks 1967
14Brooks (1967)
- in the starting square put a 1
- in the next square to the right put a 2
- in the next square up put a 3
- in the next square to the right put a 4
- in the next square down put a 5
- in the next square down put a 6
- in the next square to the left put a 7
- in the next square down put an 8
- in the next square to the left put a 9
- in the next square to the left put a 10
15Brooks 1967
16Brooks 1967
- In the starting square put a 1
- in the next square to the slow put a 2
- in the next square to the good put a 3
- in the next square to the good put a 4
- in the next square to the slow put a 5
- in the next square to the bad put a 6
- in the next square to the slow put a 7
- in the next square to the bad put a 8
- in the next square to the quick put a 9
- in the next square to the bad put a 10
17Brooks 1967
- Results
- recall in spatial condition about 8 instructions
- recall in the verbal condition about 6
instructions - Brooks also compared the effects of presenting
instructions in auditory or visual format - auditory was better for spatial instructions
- visual was better for verbal instructions
- argued that visual instructions require
visuo-spatial processing, and thereby interfere
with performance in spatial condition
18Divided attention
- Baddeley, Grant, Wight, Thomson, 1975
- subjects performed the verbal and spatial tasks
of Brooks alone or in combination with a pursuit
rotor task - pursuit rotor task keep stylus in contact with a
spot of light that follows a circular path - hypothesis performing two tasks at the same time
should be more interfering if they require
visuo-spatial cognitive processes
19Divided attention
20Divided attention spatial processing
- Conclusion
- concurrent spatial tasks interfere with visual
imagery performance
21Is imagery spatial or visual
- Hypothesis is imagery spatial or visual
- Design
- divided attention task
- primary task Brooks matrix task (spatial,
verbal) - secondary task
- visual--judge brightness of slides
- auditory tracking of pendulum with sound source
attached to pendulum with flashlight while
blindfolded sound changes when illuminated
22Is imagery spatial or visual
- Results
- spatial matrix more disrupted by spatial task
(pendulum task) - verbal matrix more disrupted by brightness
judgement - Conclusion
- spatial matrix task more strongly affected by
spatial secondary task. - Suggests that spatial processes are more
important in imagery task than are visual
processes
23Other evidence that visual imagery is not visual
- Blind subjects show many of the effects that have
been reviewed here - blind can effectively use visual imagery
mnemonics - blind show visual scanning types of effects such
as Kosslyn has demonstrated
24Visual imagery and verbal learning
- Baddeley (1975)
- effects of pursuit tracking on performance of
imageable (bullet - grey) and abstract (gratitude
- infinite) word pairs - Background
- imageable word pairs are better recalled than
abstract word pairs - dual code hypothesis of Paivio (imageable words
activate verbal and visual code)
25Visual imagery and verbal learning
- Baddeley (1975)
- presented lists of pairs of imageable or abstract
word pairs while performing pursuit rotor task - at test given first word and had to recall second
word - Results
- imageable words better recalled than abstract
words - tracking impaired recall of both types of pairs
equally
26Visual imagery and verbal learning
- Interpretation
- perhaps pursuit rotor did not interfere with task
because there was not a strong spatial component
to the task - effects of pursuit rotor on words studied using
the method of loci (Baddeley Lieberman, 1980) - participants learned list using (method of loci,
rote learning) either alone or while performing
pursuit rotor
27Baddeley Lieberman (1980)
28Baddeley Lieberman (1980)
- Conclusions
- performing a spatial secondary task (tracking)
interferes with a memory task that has a strong
spatial component (method of loci) - Question
- is the visuo-spatial sketchpad is primarily
spatial in nature, or - is this result attributable to the spatial
aspect of the tracking task
29Logie (1986)
- Purpose
- can non-spatial secondary tasks can disrupt
(non-spatial) primary tasks - tasks
- primary task learn word lists using visual
imagery or verbal rehearsal - secondary task none or sit facing a screen on
which coloured patches were shown - no response required (unattended colour)
30Logie (1986)
31Logie (1986)
- Purpose
- can non-spatial secondary tasks can disrupt
(non-spatial) primary tasks - Method
- primary tasks remember words using rote
rehearsal or visual imagery mnemonic - secondary tasks irrelevant speech or line
drawings (irrelevant pictures)
32Logie (1986)
33Logie (1986)
- Conclusion
- non-spatial secondary tasks can interfere with
memory using imagery procedures - verbal secondary tasks can interfere with memory
based on verbal rehearsal procedures
34Characteristics of visuo-spatial sketchpad
- Information into the sketchpad can be fed by
visual perception and by generation of a visual
image (recall imagery expts) - access to sketchpad by visual information is
obligatory (recall effects of unattended
pictures) - system appears to represent both visual and
spatial aspects of stimuli - neuroscience results suggest that separate
systems encode what and where (Ungerleider
Mishkin, 1982)
35Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Regional blood flow study (Roland Friberg,
1985) - subjects were asked to imagine a walk through a
familiar location and to take alternate left and
right turns - measurement of regional blood flow showed massive
increases in the occipital lobes and in the
posterior superior and posterior inferior
temporal lobes - these are the same regions that show high levels
of blood flow during visual processing
36Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Is there evidence to support dissociations of
different aspects of visual processing? - What versus colour
- De Renzi Spinnler (1967) report patients who
have are colour blindness as a result of cortical
damage, and are unable to image the colour of
objects (e.g., what colour is a banana?) - Beauvois Saillant (1985) reported a patient who
could draw objects from memory, but could not
report their colour
37Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Is there evidence to support dissociations of
different aspects of visual processing? - What versus where Ungerleider Mishkin (1982)
- What nonmatching to sample task
- monkey sees object beneath object is peanut
(sample) next trial monkey sees two objects, the
original and a new one - peanut is beneath new object
38Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- What versus where Ungerleider Mishkin (1982)
- Where landmark task
- monkey sees 2 trapdoors under 1 trapdoor is a
peanut - there is a landmark (a cylinder) closer to the
trapdoor containing the reward
39Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Ungerleider Mishkin (1982)
- trained monkeys to perform each task
- group 1 had temporal lobes lesioned
- group 2 had parietal lobes lesioned
- group 1 fine on landmark task, but impaired on
nonmatching to sample task - group 2 showed opposite pattern
- Interpretation
- there are two separate streams of processing in
the visual system what and where
40Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Ungerleider Mishkin (1982)
- puzzle how can you identify an object (what)
without know about the location of its parts
(where) - Goodale Milner (1992)
- What/how hypothesis
- argue that the spatial information is present in
both streams - critical difference is the function of the
spatial information
41Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Goodale Milner (1992)
- What/how hypothesis
- argue that the spatial information is present in
both streams - critical difference is the function of the
spatial information - in the what stream the spatial information
identifies objects and is associated with
consciousness - the end product is a conscious awareness of
objects, their colour etc.
42Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Goodale Milner (1992)
- What/how hypothesis
- the critical function of the how stream is to
help organisms move - it knows the location of objects so that you can
reach to the right spot it knows the shape of
objects so that you can grasp the object
effectively - this knowledge, however, is unconscious
43Neuropsychology of visual imagery
- Results from patients with lesions supports the
idea that there are dissociations between what
and where/how, as does data from cognitively
unimpaired individuals - e.g., the visual system is fooled by visual
illusions, but the grasping system is not - present visual illusion to individual and have
them judge size by indicating it using thumb and
index finger or to pick up the poker chip