Litcius/Paper detail

Temporal context guides visual exploration during scene recognition.

James E. Kragel, Joel L. Voss

2020Journal of Experimental Psychology General23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Memories for episodes are temporally structured. Cognitive models derived from list-learning experiments attribute this structure to the retrieval of temporal context information that indicates when a memory occurred. These models predict key features of memory recall, such as the strong tendency to retrieve studied items in the order in which they were first encountered. Can such models explain ecological memory behaviors, such as eye movements during encoding and retrieval of complex visual stimuli? We tested predictions from retrieved-context models using three data sets involving recognition memory and free viewing of complex scenes. Subjects reinstated sequences of eye movements from one scene-viewing episode to the next. Moreover, sequence reinstatement decayed over time and was associated with successful memory. We observed memory-driven reinstatement even after accounting for intrinsic scene properties that produced consistent eye movements. These findings confirm predictions of retrieved-context models, suggesting retrieval of temporal context influences complex behaviors generated during naturalistic memory experiences. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

RecallPsychologyContext (archaeology)Encoding (memory)Cognitive psychologyEye movementCognitionRecognition memoryVisual memoryContext-dependent memoryPsycINFOMemoriaContext effectFree recallNeuroscienceLawPolitical sciencePaleontologyLinguisticsMEDLINEBiologyPhilosophyWord (group theory)Visual Attention and Saliency DetectionGaze Tracking and Assistive TechnologyImage Retrieval and Classification Techniques