Publication | Closed Access
The relationship between mental rotation and representational momentum.
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Citations
33
References
1999
Year
NeurolinguisticsCognitionAttentionHuman MemoryExplicit MemoryMental RotationSocial SciencesPsychologyMemoryMemory DistortionCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceEmbodied CognitionExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopImplicit MemoryCognitive DynamicsLarger Memory DistortionsSpatial CognitionSmaller Memory Distortions
Two experiments explored a possible relationship between mental rotation and representational momentum, a task in which participants were asked to remember an object's position following a sequence of images implying motion. Typically, participants misremember the position as distorted forward along the implied trajectory. If representational momentum relies on mental imagery, the magnitude of memory distortion in a representational momentum task should be positively correlated with the rate of mental rotation. As predicted, faster mental rotation rates and larger memory distortions for object position were observed for rotational axes aligned with the viewers' coordinate system. In addition, participants with slower mental rotation rates produced smaller memory distortions in the implied-event task.
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