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- Title
Visual search for changes in scenes creates long-term, incidental memory traces.
- Authors
Utochkin, Igor S.; Wolfe, Jeremy M.
- Abstract
Humans are very good at remembering large numbers of scenes over substantial periods of time. But how good are they at remembering <italic>changes</italic> to scenes? In this study, we tested scene memory and change detection two weeks after initial scene learning. In Experiments 1-3, scenes were learned incidentally during visual search for change. In Experiment 4, observers explicitly memorized scenes. At test, after two weeks observers were asked to discriminate old from new scenes, to recall a change that they had detected in the study phase, or to detect a newly introduced change in the memorization experiment. Next, they performed a change detection task, usually looking for the same change as in the study period. Scene recognition memory was found to be similar in all experiments, regardless of the study task. In Experiment 1, more difficult change detection produced better scene memory. Experiments 2 and 3 supported a “depth-of-processing” account for the effects of initial search and change detection on incidental memory for scenes. Of most interest, change detection was faster during the test phase than during the study phase, even when the observer had no explicit memory of having found that change previously. This result was replicated in two of our three change detection experiments. We conclude that scenes can be encoded incidentally as well as explicitly and that changes in those scenes can leave measurable traces even if they are not explicitly recalled.
- Subjects
VISUAL perception; LONG-term memory; CHANGE blindness; INCIDENTAL learning; AUDITORY scene analysis; VISUAL memory
- Publication
Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, 2018, Vol 80, Issue 4, p829
- ISSN
1943-3921
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3758/s13414-018-1486-y