Features, as well as space and time, guide object persistence
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  • 作者:Cathleen M. Moore (1)
    Teresa Stephens (1)
    Elisabeth Hein (1)
  • 刊名:Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
  • 出版年:2010
  • 出版时间:October 2010
  • 年:2010
  • 卷:17
  • 期:5
  • 页码:731-736
  • 全文大小:138KB
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  • 作者单位:Cathleen M. Moore (1)
    Teresa Stephens (1)
    Elisabeth Hein (1)

    1. E11 Seashore Hall, University of Iowa, 52242, Iowa City, IA
文摘
What role do surface features (e.g., color) play in the establishment and maintenance of episodic representations of objects (object files)? Mitroff and Alvarez (2007) showed that stimuli that were linked by a continuous spatiotemporal history yielded object-specific preview benefits—a standard index of object files—whereas stimuli linked only by shared surface features did not. Here, it is shown that abruptly changing the features of an object that has been established on the basis of spatiotemporal history can disrupt object-specific preview benefits (Experiments 1 and 2). Moreover, under some conditions, feature match alone can give rise to the preview benefits (Experiment 3). These results indicate that surface features, as well as spatiotemporal factors, play an important role in establishing and maintaining episodic object representations.

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