Litcius/Paper detail

Third-person perspectives in photographs influence visual and spatial perspectives during subsequent memory retrieval

Petra Marcotti, Peggy L. St. Jacques

2021Journal of Cognitive Psychology19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Reviewing photographs of the past influences our memories, but there is minimal research examining the influence of the viewpoint during photographic review of memories. In the current study, we examined how reviewing photographs from first-person versus third-person perspectives influences visual and spatial perspective in subsequent memories. Participants formed memories for mini-events performed in the lab, reviewed photographs of these events one week later from first-person and third-person perspectives, and then two days later memories for these events were tested against no photographic review. We found that third-person photographs increased observer-like perspectives during subsequent remembering, suggesting that photographic review of novel viewpoints changes the location from which the rememberer views the past event. Reviewing third-person photographs also reduced the accuracy of the spatial location of objects, indicating that photographic review can also update spatial perspective. In sum, these findings show that the viewpoint of photographs can powerfully influence memories.

Topics & Concepts

ViewpointsPsychologyThird personPerspective (graphical)PhotographyAutobiographical memoryEvent (particle physics)First personCognitive psychologyVisual artsRecallPsychoanalysisArtQuantum mechanicsPhysicsMemory Processes and InfluencesMemory and Neural MechanismsVisual Attention and Saliency Detection